Abstract

In several species, mate choice is influenced by parental features through sexual imprinting, but in humans evidence is scarce and open to alternative explanations. We examined whether daughters’ preference for mates with light vs dark eyes is affected by the eye colour of parents. In an online study, over one thousand women rated the attractiveness of men as potential partners for either a long- or a short-term relationship. Each male face was shown twice, with light (blue or green) and with dark (brown or dark brown) eyes. Having a light-eyed father increased the preference for light-eyed men in both relationship contexts. Having light eyes increased this preference too, but only when men were regarded as potential long-term companions. Asymmetrically, in real life, father’s eye colour was the only predictor of partner’s eye colour; own colour was irrelevant. Mother’s eye colour never mattered, affecting neither preferences nor real-life choices. The effect of paternal eye colour was modulated by the quality of the relationship between father and daughter, suggesting (flexible) sexual imprinting rather than a simple inheritance of maternal preferences. Our data provide evidence that in humans, as in birds and sheep, visual experience of parental features shapes later sexual preferences.

Highlights

  • Across a wide variety of species—from fish to birds and mammals—mate choice is influenced by the early experience of parental features, a mechanism known as sexual imprinting[1,2]

  • Eye colour is polygenic, a single variation in the HERC2 gene determines whether the human ancestral brown eye colour is on or off[14]

  • Paternal eye colour was significant as a main effect, F(1, 869) = 10.9, p = 0.001; crucially, it did not interact with context, F < 1

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Summary

Introduction

Across a wide variety of species—from fish to birds and mammals—mate choice is influenced by the early experience of parental features, a mechanism known as sexual imprinting[1,2]. On virtual-partner data, we used point-biserial correlations to test the relationship between own, maternal, paternal eye colour (light vs dark) and preference for light-eyed virtual partners. On real-partner data, we used bivariate correlations to test the relationship between own, maternal, paternal, and partner’s eye colours as coded on the 5-point scale from light to dark; because of the ordinal nature of this scale, we chose nonparametric Spearman’s rho (rS).

Results
Conclusion
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