Abstract

To investigate the function of altruism as a mating signal especially among males, the present study examined whether the motivation of a man who behaves altruistically toward a woman is more likely to be perceived as selfish by a third party. In two studies, participants read vignettes about one person helping a stranger, after which they rated the helpers’ perceived selfish motivation. We manipulated the sex of the recipient and helper (Study 1) and the recipient’s age (young vs. old; Study 2). In both studies, a man who helped a young woman was regarded as having a more selfish motivation than was an individual who helped the same sex. Conversely, although a woman who helped a man was viewed as more selfish than was a woman who helped another woman, the effect was smaller than when the helper was male (Study 1). Furthermore, a man who helped an old woman was not regarded as more selfish than was a man who helped another man (Study 2). These results support the notion that male altruism works as a courtship display.

Highlights

  • Altruistic behaviors work as costly signals conveying actors’ attractive traits as partners (Zahavi, 1995)

  • The function of generosity as a mating signal might differ between the sexes; males competitively “show off” their altruism to obtain mates more than do females, whereas females place greater importance on potential mates’ generosity more than do males (e.g., Phillips et al, 2008)

  • A 2 × 2 two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was run on selfish motivation

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Summary

Introduction

Altruistic behaviors work as costly signals conveying actors’ attractive traits as partners (Zahavi, 1995). Some studies focused on sex differences in mate preference for generosity (e.g., Barclay, 2010; Oda et al, 2013; Phillips et al, 2008). In Study 1, participants read vignettes about a person helping a stranger and evaluated actors’ ulterior motive.

Results
Conclusion
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