Chapter Nine: Attraction and Close Relationships
Human infants are equipped with reflexes that orient them toward people
Uniquely responsive to human faces
Turn their heads toward voices
Able to mimic certain facial gestures on cue
People are social beings - people need people
The need to belong is a basic human motive
We care deeply what others think of us
Social Anxiety Disorder: A disorder characterized by intense feelings of discomfort in situations that invite public scrutiny
People who have a network of close social ties have higher self-esteem and greater satisfaction with life compared to those who live more isolated lives
People who are socially connected rather than isolated are physically healthier and less likely to die a premature death
The larger your online social network is, the ore people there are to view your status updates and the more socially connected you are likely to feel
Need for Affiliation: A desire to establish social contact with others
Individuals differ in the strength of their need for affiliation
Stress can strongly arouse our need for affiliation
An external threat triggers fear and motivates us to affiliate, particularly with others who face a similar threat
Utility Theory: Stress sparks the desire to affiliate only when being with others is seen as useful in reducing the negative impact of the stressful situation
People facing an imminent threat seek each other out in order to gain cognitive clarity about the danger they’re in
Being alone and feeling lonely motivates people of all ages to connect with others in order to satisfy a reaffiliation motive
Individuals who lack power and influence feel a need to seek out other people
Shyness is a common characteristic
People who are extremely shy develop a pattern of risk avoidance that can set them up for unpleasant and unrewarding interactions
Shyness can arise from different sources
May stem from an inborn personality trait
May develop as a learned reaction to failed interactions
Not all shy infants grow up to become inhibited adults, but there is some continuity
People who are shy exhibit greater activity in the amygdala (brain region responsible for fear processing) when exposed to pictures of strangers
Shy people evaluate themselves negatively, expect to fail in their social encounters, and blame themselves when they do
Many shy people go into self-imposed isolation, which often makes them feel lonely
Problem stems from a paralyzing fear of rejection
People who fear rejection think that their friendly or romantic interest is transparent to others, which leads them to back off
Loneliness: A feeling of deprivation about existing social relations
Intimate loneliness: When someone wants but does not have a spouse, significant other, or best friends to rely on for emotional support, especially during personal crises
Relational loneliness: When someone wants but does not have friendships from school and work and family connections
Collective loneliness: When someone wants but does not have remote relationships and social identities derived from alumni and clubs
The more voluntary associations we have, the lower one’s collective loneliness
Most people feel lonely at some point in life
Brief loneliness motivates a need for reaffiliation
Prolonged loneliness triggers a range of physical and mental health problems
Loneliness can take shape in different ways from one culture to the next
Hikikomori: A form of social withdrawal that affects a significant number of young adults in Japan
Characterized by a full withdrawal from intimate relationships outside of the family
Those afflicted don’t attend school or have jobs
Spend much of their time isolated at home
Don’t appear to suffer from depression or other psychological disorders
Share histories of parental rejection, family disruption, and peer bullying and rejection
People in collectivist cultures are at a high risk for loneliness, relative to Westerners
Anyone can feel lonely at any time and any place
How do people combat loneliness?
Try harder to be friendly to other people
Take their mind off the problem by reading or watching TV
Try extra hard to succeed at another aspect of life
Stay busy at other activities
Seek new ways to meet people
Talk to someone about the problem
Use alcohol or drugs to wash away feelings of loneliness
People are attracted to those with whom they can have a relationship that is rewarding
Provide us with attention, support, money, status, information, and other valuable resources
Feels good to be with someone who is beautiful, smart, or funny, or who happens to be in our presence when times are good
Each of us is attracted to others we see as being both able and willing to fulfill our various relationship needs
Human beings exhibit patterns of attraction and male selection that favor the conception, birth, and survival of their offspring
Online dating is still relatively new
Benefits of online dating
Exposure and access to large numbers of profiles of potential romantic partners
A means of communicating through email, IM, and live chat via webcams
A matching “algorithm” that brings together users who are likely to be attracted to one another
The vast majority of potential partners live far away, but people are most likely to become attracted to someone they’ve seen and become familiar with
The single best predictor of whether two people will get together is physical proximity / nearness
Where we live influences the friends we make
Proximity increases frequency of contact
Mere Exposure Effect: The phenomenon whereby the more often people are exposed to a stimulus, the more positively they evaluate that stimulus
The more often people saw a novel stimulus, the more they came to like it
The mere exposure effect can influence us without our awareness
Familiarity breeds attraction
Familiarity can even influence self-evaluations
Beautiful faces capture our attention
Group Attractiveness Effect: The perceived physical attractiveness of a group as a whole is greater than the average attractiveness of its individual members
Certain faces are inherently more attractive, on average, than others
Smooth skin
Pleasant expression
Youthfulness
People tend to agree about what constitutes an attractive body
Hourglass figure in women
V-shaped physique in men
Tall men
People like averaged faces because they are more proportionally face-like and have features that are less distinctive, so they seem more familiar to us
People are drawn to faces that are symmetrical
Associated with biological health, fitness, and fertility
Babies also show a preference for attractive faces
Other social psychologists believe that physical attractiveness is subjective
Individuals differ a great deal in their private preferences
People from different cultures enhance their beauty in very different ways
Differences in preferences found in cultures and racial groups
Some cultures find women with tubular shapes as more attractive
White Americans care more about the weight of females when judging attractiveness than Black Americans do
Standards of beauty change over time
Our perceptions of someone’s beauty can be inflated or deflated by various circumstances
People often see others as more physically attractive if they have nonphysical qualities that make them likable
Color can affect attractiveness (ex: red and sex)
People who are seen as physically attractive are at a social advantage
It is inherently rewarding to be in the company of people who are aesthetically appealing
What-is-beautiful-is-good Stereotype: The belief that physically attractive individuals also possess desirable personality characteristics
In movies, the more attractive the characters were, the more frequently they were portrayed as virtuous, romantically active, and successful
The entertainment industry helps to perpetuate our tendency to judge people by their physical appearance
Beauty is not related to objective measures of important traits such as intelligence, personality, adjustment, or self-esteem
Each of us creates support for the bias via a self-fulfilling prophecy model
Highly attractive people can’t always tell if the attention and praise they receive from others is due to their talent or just their good looks
Feedback is sometimes hard to interpret
Pressure to maintain one’s appearance
An obsession with thinness can give rise to serious eating disorders
Young women who see magazine ads or TV commercials that feature ultra-thin models become more dissatisfied with their own bodies than those who view neutral materials
The cultural ideal for thinness may get set in childhood
Little relationship between youthful appearance and later happiness
People tend to associate with others who are similar to themselves
It’s the mere perception of similarity that draws people together
Demographic
Sharing the same race, ethnic background, age, religion, level of education, and occupation
People who go together tend to resemble each other more than randomly paired couples
People who share in demographics liked each other more than those who were dissimilar
People form social niches that are homogeneous and divided along the lines of demographic groups
Attitudes
Sharing the same opinions, interests, and values
People have to get to know each other first
Participants like other people better when they perceive their attitudes as being similar
Dissimilarity triggers repulsion (the desire to avoid someone)
We avoid associating with others who are dissimilar, and among those who remain, we are drawn to those who are most similar
Matching Hypothesis: The proposition that people are attracted to others who are similar in physical attractiveness
Men and women on online dating sites tended to contact and be contacted by others whose relative popularity on the site was similar to their own
People tend to shy away from making romantic pursuits with others who seem out of their league
Similarity in subjective experience
I-sharing: When two people at a common event bond over reactions, they feel as though they’ve shared a subjective experience
People who I-share, even if they’re otherwise dissimilar, feel a profound sense of connection to one another
Complementarity Hypothesis: People seek others whose needs oppose their own
No support for this view
Complementarity doesn’t make for compatible attraction
While opposites may seem exotic at first glance, over time the differences become difficult to negotiate
People prefer relationships that are psychologically balanced
A state of imbalance caused distress
We want to like the friends of our friends and the enemies of our enemies
We don’t expect our friends and enemies to get along
Reciprocity: A mutual exchange between what we give and what we receive
We tend to like others who indicate that they like us
People like others more when their affection takes time to earn than when it comes easy
People are drawn to members of the opposite sex who like them, but only when these others are selective and discriminating
We like those who are socially selective
Hard-to-get Effect: The tendency to prefer people who are highly selective in their social choices over those who are more readily available
We are turned off by those who reject us because they are committed to someone else or have no interest in us
We tend to prefer people who are moderately selective compared with those who are non-selective or too selective
Non-selective - having poor taste or low standards
Too selective - having very high taste
Individuals differ a great deal in terms of how selective they are
People who fear being single set lower standards, are less selective, and tolerate lesser relationships
The fear of being single leads people to settle for less desirable partners
Psychological Reactance: The proposition that people are highly motivated to protect their freedom to choose and behave as they please
People reassert themselves, often by wanting that which is unavailable too much
People of the opposite sex were seen as more attractive as the night wore on
Closing time posed a threat, which sparked desire, only to those on the lookout for a late-night date
Most men appear to be more sex-driven than most women
Human beings all over the world exhibit mate-selection patterns that favor the conception, birth, and survival of their offspring
Women must be highly selective because they are biologically limited in the number of children they can bear and raise in a lifetime
Must protect her children
Searches for a mate who possesses (or has the potential to possess) economic resources and is willing to commit those resources to support her offspring
Women should be attracted to men who are older and financially secure or who have ambition and other traits predictive of future success
Men can father an unlimited number of children and can ensure their reproductive success by inseminating many women, and are mainly focused on being certain that the babies being born are actually their own
Men seek out women who are young and physically attractive, attributes that signal health and reproductive fertility
Men should favor chastity, pursuing women they think will be sexually faithful
When mate seekers can’t have it all and must focus on what’s important, they prioritize their choices in the ways predicted by evolutionary theory
Universal tendency for men to seek younger women (who are most likely to be fertile) and for women to desire older men (who are most likely to have financial resources)
Men in their thirties seek out women who are 5 years younger
Men in their fifties prefer women 10 to 20 years younger
Girls and women of all ages are attracted to men who are older than they are
Teenage boys say they are most attracted to women who are slightly older than they are, women in their fertile twenties
The older men were, the more they wanted increasingly younger women
Women of all ages were more likely to seek out status information and men who were older
In the US, the mate preferences predicted by evolutionary theory persist throughout the lifespan
May have evolves as a sexually selected mating signal
Men flaunt their resources to attract women
Male and female stereotypes would suggest that men are more likely to chase sex and women seek love
When asked who “gets serious” first, 84% chose women
62% reported that the man said “I love you” first
Expression of love - how happy are they when the disclosure comes before sex compared to after?
Prior to sexual activity, men reported feeling happier and more positive about the expression of love than women did
Presex confession may signal interest in advancing a relationship to include sexual activity
After sexual activity, women reacted with somewhat more positive emotion
A postsex confession may more accurately signal a desire for long-term commitment
Jealousy: A negative emotional state that arises from a perceived threat to one’s relationship
Common and normal human reaction
A man should be most upset by sexual infidelity because a wife’s extramarital affair increases the risk that the children he supports aren’t his own
A women should feel more threatened by emotional infidelity because a husband who falls in love with another woman might leave and withdraw his financial support
Jealousy reactions are intensified among people who believe that there is a scarcity of potential mates
Men were more likely to accuse their partners of sexual infidelity
Women were more likely to accuse their partners of emotional infidelity
Jealous men were more likely to report that their rival had greater status / resources
Jealous women were more likely to report that their rival was younger / more attractive
Women trade youth and beauty for money not for reproductive purposes but rather because they often lack direct access to economic power
The more economic power women had, the more important male physical attractiveness was to them
Men get more upset over sexual infidelity not because of uncertain paternity but because they reasonably assume that a married woman who has a sexual affair is also likely to have intimate feelings for her extramarital partner
Although men and women react differently when asked to imagine a partner’s sexual or emotional infidelity, they are equally more upset by emotional infidelity when asked to recall actual experiences from a past relationship
Self-report differences typically found between the sexes are small compared to the similarities
Women desire physical attractiveness as much as men do when asked about what they want in a short-term casual sex partner
Does the stated preference reported match the actual preferences found in face-to-face interactions?
In practice, their attraction to each other was based on similar characteristics
Sex differences often observed are neither predictable nor universal
Intimate Relationships: A close relationship between two adults involving emotional attachment, fulfillment of psychological needs, or interdependence
Three basic components
Feelings of attachment, affection, and love
Fulfillment of psychological needs
Interdependence between partners, each of whom has a meaningful influence on the other
Not all intimate relationships contain all three ingredients
Empty Shell Marriage: A marriage that revolves around coordinated daily activities, but emotional attachment is weak and psychological needs go unmet
Relationships progress in order through a series of stages
Stimulus-Value-Role Theory
Stimulus Stage: Attraction is sparked by external attributes such as physical appearance
Value Stage: Attachment is based on similarity of values and beliefs
Role Stage: Commitment is based on the enactment of such roles as husband and wife
Most researchers don’t believe that intimate relationships progress through a fixed sequence of stages
Love depends on the experience of positive emotions in the presence of a partner
As the rewards pile up, love develops
As rewards diminish, love erodes
Social Exchange Theory: A perspective that views people as motivated to maximize benefits and minimize costs in their relationships with others
Relationships that provide more rewards and fewer costs will be more satisfying and endure longer
Dating couples who experience greater increases in rewards as their relationship progresses are more likely to stay together than are those who experience small increases or declines
Both rewards and costs start to contribute to levels of satisfaction
All people bring to a relationship certain expectations about the balance sheet to which they are entitled
Comparison Level
A person with a high CL expects their relationships to be rewarding
Someone with a low CL doesn’t expect their relationships to be rewarding
Situations that meet or exceed a person’s expectations are more satisfying than those who fall short
Comparison Level for Alternatives
People’s expectations about what they would receive in an alternative situation
If the rewards available elsewhere are believed to be high, a person will be less committed to staying in the present relationship
If people perceive that they have few acceptable alternatives, they will tend to remain, even in an unsatisfying relationship that fails to meet expectations
People who are in love tend to see their partners and relationships through rose-colored glasses
People in love tend to see other prospective partners as less appealing
Investment: Something a person puts into a relationship that they cannot recover if the relationship ends
Investments increase commitment
Commitment levels predict how long relationships will last
The best-adjusted relationships are those in which each partner is committed and sees the other as mutually committed
People who are highly committed are more likely to forgive and forget when their partners betray the relationship norm
The investment model can be used to predict whether battered women will remain in an abusive relationship
Equity Theory: The theory that people are most satisfied with a relationship when the ratio between benefits and contributions is similar for both partners
In an inequitable relationship, the balance is disturbed
The over-benefited partner receives more benefits than they deserve on the basis of contributions made
The under-benefited partner receives fewer benefits than deserved
Both overbenefit and underbenefit are unstable and unhappy states
Underbenefited partners feel angry and resentful because they’re giving more than their partner for the benefits they receive
Overbenefited partners feel guilty because they’re profiting unfairly
It is more unpleasant to feel underbenefited than overbenefited
Any partner in a close relationship may feel a need to restore the balance when they are feeling insecure
Trust-Insurance System: A natural, unconscious system employed by people in relationships in which they keep a tally of costs and benefits in order to detect and repair possible imbalances
On days after participants anxiously felt like they weren’t good enough for their partner, they were more likely to make sacrifices
Restorative actions were accompanied by lowered feelings of inferiority on the same day
On the next day, the partners who benefited from these actions expressed fewer doubts about their marriage
Equilibrium Model of Relationship Maintenance
People are motivated to preserve important relationships
Declines in satisfaction and commitment motivate threat-mitigating tactics
These tactics serve to restore levels of satisfaction and commitment
Exchange Relationship: A relationship in which the participants expect and desire strict reciprocity in their interactions
People want costs to be quickly offset by compensation
Communal Relationship: A relationship in which the participants expect and desire mutual responsiveness to each other’s needs
No regard for whether they have given or received a benefit
TikTok Example: There is a subsection of TikTok where ladies make lunches for their partners. These TikToks sometimes stir up controversy.
Commenters often feel that women shouldn’t have to make lunches for their partners and ask OPs what their partner does for them. This represents an exchange relationship
OP usually responds that their partner doesn’t need to do anything for them
They like making the lunches
Their partner works and this is a way to provide
The partner has to wake up early and comes home late and this is a way to fill a need
Making lunches is how they show love
Etc etc
This is an example of a communal relationship
Exchange relationships typically exist between strangers and casual acquaintances
Strong communal relationships are usually limited to close friends, romantic partners, and family members
Once a communal norm has been adopted in a relationship, the motivation to respond to the other’s needs becomes automatic
Adults exhibit specific learned attachment styles in their romantic relationships
Attachment Style: The way a person typically interacts with significant others
Secure Attachment: When babies cry in distress when the mother leaves them and beams with delight when she returns
Insecure Attachment
Avoidant-Insecure Attachment: When babies don’t react much when the mother leaves or when she returns
Anxious-Insecure Attachment: When babies cling and cry when the mother leaves and greets her with anger or apathy upon her return
Infants form internal working models of attachment figures and these models guide their relationships later in life
Infants classified as securely attached are later more positive in their outlook toward others
Adult relationship patterns are predictable from parent-child relations in adolescence
People who have a secure attachment style report having satisfying relationships that are happy, friendly, based on mutual trust, and enduring
Avoidant lovers fear intimacy and believe that romantic love is doomed to fade
Anxious lovers report a love life full of emotional highs and lows, obsessive preoccupation, and extreme sexual attraction and jealousy
Our attachment styles can be seen in our everyday behavior
People who are secure tend to have more lasting relationships
Although styles of attachment are modestly stable over time, they are not fixed
John Alan Lee
Three primary love styles
eros - erotic love
ludus - uncommitted love
storge - friendship love
Secondary love styles
mania - demanding and possessive love
pragma - pragmatic love
agape - altruistic love
Men tend to score higher than women on ludus
Women score higher on storge, mania, and pragma
Triangular Theory of Love
There are eight basic subtypes of love, and all can be derived from the presence or absence of three components
Intimacy: The emotional component, which involves liking and feelings of closeness
Passion: The motivational component, which contains drives that trigger attraction, romance, and sexual desire
Commitment: The cognitive component, which reflects the decision to make a long-term commitment to a loved partner
Passionate Love: Romantic love characterized by high arousal, intense attraction, and fear of rejection
Companionate Love: A secure, trusting, stable partnership
Passionate love is fueled by two ingredients
A heightened state of physiological arousal
The belief that this arousal was triggered by the beloved person
Can sometimes be hard to interpret
Excitation Transfer: The process whereby arousal caused by one stimulus is added to arousal from a second stimulus and the combined arousal is attributed to the second stimulus
Love at first fright
Arousal, even without distress, intensifies emotional reactions, positive or negative
Passionate love tends to diminish somewhat over time
Obsessional aspect of passionate love clearly diminishes in long-term relationships
A romantic aspect often endures
For some people, the intense love of their long-term partner may last for long periods of time
Form of affection that binds close friends as well as lovers
Less intense than passionate love
Deeper and more enduring than passionate love
Self-Disclosure: Revelations about the self that a person makes to others
The willingness to disclose intimate facts and feelings lies at the heart of our closest and most intimate relationships
The more emotionally involved people are in a close relationship, the more the self-disclose to each other
We disclose to people we like
We like people who disclose to us
We like people to whom we have disclosed
Partners reveal more to each other as their relationship grows over time
Social Penetration Theory: Relationships progress from superficial exchanges to more intimate ones
At first, people give relatively little of themselves to each other and receive little in return
Exchanges become
broader: covering more areas of their lives
deeper: involving more sensitive areas
Patterns of self-disclosure change according to the state of a relationship
Individuals differ in the tendency to share private, intimate thoughts with others
On average, women are more open than men
People in general are more self-disclosing to women than to men
Male friends seem to bond more by taking part in common activities
Physical attractiveness is more important to men all over the world
Financial resources are more important to women all over the world
In some countries, people valued chastity in a mate, but in others, chastity was either unimportant or negatively valued
Passionate love is a widespread and universal emotion
Romantic love is hardwired in the neurochemistry of the brain
Dopamine associated with highs of romantic passion
Also associated with the lows of rejection
Parallels between romantic love and substance addiction
Reported sexual activity was more frequent and more varied than anyone had expected
Respondents may not be honest in their disclosures
People differ in their interpretations of survey questions
Men view the world in more sexualized terms than women do
Women tend to underperceive sex
Men report being more promiscuous, more likely to think about sex, more permissive, and more likely to fantasize about sex with multiple partners
Most men desire more sex partners and more sexual variety than most women do
Sexual Orientation: A person’s preference for members of the same sex (homosexuality), opposite sex (heterosexuality), or both sexes (bisexuality)
An exclusive homosexual orientation is relatively rare among humans and other animals
3-4% in men, 1.5-2% in women
Homosexual behaviors are more common
Sexual orientation should be seen alone a continuum
Roots of homosexuality
Aristotle: Homosexuality is inborn, but strengthened by habit
Post-Freud psychoanalysts: Homosexuality stems from family dynamics, specifically a child’s overattachment to a parent of the same or opposite sex
Social Learning Theorists: Homosexuality stems from rewarding sexual experiences with same-sex peers in childhood
Little hard evidence to support these claims
In male homosexual brains, the nucleus was half the size of male heterosexual brains and comparable to female heterosexual brains
Human infants are equipped with reflexes that orient them toward people
Uniquely responsive to human faces
Turn their heads toward voices
Able to mimic certain facial gestures on cue
People are social beings - people need people
The need to belong is a basic human motive
We care deeply what others think of us
Social Anxiety Disorder: A disorder characterized by intense feelings of discomfort in situations that invite public scrutiny
People who have a network of close social ties have higher self-esteem and greater satisfaction with life compared to those who live more isolated lives
People who are socially connected rather than isolated are physically healthier and less likely to die a premature death
The larger your online social network is, the ore people there are to view your status updates and the more socially connected you are likely to feel
Need for Affiliation: A desire to establish social contact with others
Individuals differ in the strength of their need for affiliation
Stress can strongly arouse our need for affiliation
An external threat triggers fear and motivates us to affiliate, particularly with others who face a similar threat
Utility Theory: Stress sparks the desire to affiliate only when being with others is seen as useful in reducing the negative impact of the stressful situation
People facing an imminent threat seek each other out in order to gain cognitive clarity about the danger they’re in
Being alone and feeling lonely motivates people of all ages to connect with others in order to satisfy a reaffiliation motive
Individuals who lack power and influence feel a need to seek out other people
Shyness is a common characteristic
People who are extremely shy develop a pattern of risk avoidance that can set them up for unpleasant and unrewarding interactions
Shyness can arise from different sources
May stem from an inborn personality trait
May develop as a learned reaction to failed interactions
Not all shy infants grow up to become inhibited adults, but there is some continuity
People who are shy exhibit greater activity in the amygdala (brain region responsible for fear processing) when exposed to pictures of strangers
Shy people evaluate themselves negatively, expect to fail in their social encounters, and blame themselves when they do
Many shy people go into self-imposed isolation, which often makes them feel lonely
Problem stems from a paralyzing fear of rejection
People who fear rejection think that their friendly or romantic interest is transparent to others, which leads them to back off
Loneliness: A feeling of deprivation about existing social relations
Intimate loneliness: When someone wants but does not have a spouse, significant other, or best friends to rely on for emotional support, especially during personal crises
Relational loneliness: When someone wants but does not have friendships from school and work and family connections
Collective loneliness: When someone wants but does not have remote relationships and social identities derived from alumni and clubs
The more voluntary associations we have, the lower one’s collective loneliness
Most people feel lonely at some point in life
Brief loneliness motivates a need for reaffiliation
Prolonged loneliness triggers a range of physical and mental health problems
Loneliness can take shape in different ways from one culture to the next
Hikikomori: A form of social withdrawal that affects a significant number of young adults in Japan
Characterized by a full withdrawal from intimate relationships outside of the family
Those afflicted don’t attend school or have jobs
Spend much of their time isolated at home
Don’t appear to suffer from depression or other psychological disorders
Share histories of parental rejection, family disruption, and peer bullying and rejection
People in collectivist cultures are at a high risk for loneliness, relative to Westerners
Anyone can feel lonely at any time and any place
How do people combat loneliness?
Try harder to be friendly to other people
Take their mind off the problem by reading or watching TV
Try extra hard to succeed at another aspect of life
Stay busy at other activities
Seek new ways to meet people
Talk to someone about the problem
Use alcohol or drugs to wash away feelings of loneliness
People are attracted to those with whom they can have a relationship that is rewarding
Provide us with attention, support, money, status, information, and other valuable resources
Feels good to be with someone who is beautiful, smart, or funny, or who happens to be in our presence when times are good
Each of us is attracted to others we see as being both able and willing to fulfill our various relationship needs
Human beings exhibit patterns of attraction and male selection that favor the conception, birth, and survival of their offspring
Online dating is still relatively new
Benefits of online dating
Exposure and access to large numbers of profiles of potential romantic partners
A means of communicating through email, IM, and live chat via webcams
A matching “algorithm” that brings together users who are likely to be attracted to one another
The vast majority of potential partners live far away, but people are most likely to become attracted to someone they’ve seen and become familiar with
The single best predictor of whether two people will get together is physical proximity / nearness
Where we live influences the friends we make
Proximity increases frequency of contact
Mere Exposure Effect: The phenomenon whereby the more often people are exposed to a stimulus, the more positively they evaluate that stimulus
The more often people saw a novel stimulus, the more they came to like it
The mere exposure effect can influence us without our awareness
Familiarity breeds attraction
Familiarity can even influence self-evaluations
Beautiful faces capture our attention
Group Attractiveness Effect: The perceived physical attractiveness of a group as a whole is greater than the average attractiveness of its individual members
Certain faces are inherently more attractive, on average, than others
Smooth skin
Pleasant expression
Youthfulness
People tend to agree about what constitutes an attractive body
Hourglass figure in women
V-shaped physique in men
Tall men
People like averaged faces because they are more proportionally face-like and have features that are less distinctive, so they seem more familiar to us
People are drawn to faces that are symmetrical
Associated with biological health, fitness, and fertility
Babies also show a preference for attractive faces
Other social psychologists believe that physical attractiveness is subjective
Individuals differ a great deal in their private preferences
People from different cultures enhance their beauty in very different ways
Differences in preferences found in cultures and racial groups
Some cultures find women with tubular shapes as more attractive
White Americans care more about the weight of females when judging attractiveness than Black Americans do
Standards of beauty change over time
Our perceptions of someone’s beauty can be inflated or deflated by various circumstances
People often see others as more physically attractive if they have nonphysical qualities that make them likable
Color can affect attractiveness (ex: red and sex)
People who are seen as physically attractive are at a social advantage
It is inherently rewarding to be in the company of people who are aesthetically appealing
What-is-beautiful-is-good Stereotype: The belief that physically attractive individuals also possess desirable personality characteristics
In movies, the more attractive the characters were, the more frequently they were portrayed as virtuous, romantically active, and successful
The entertainment industry helps to perpetuate our tendency to judge people by their physical appearance
Beauty is not related to objective measures of important traits such as intelligence, personality, adjustment, or self-esteem
Each of us creates support for the bias via a self-fulfilling prophecy model
Highly attractive people can’t always tell if the attention and praise they receive from others is due to their talent or just their good looks
Feedback is sometimes hard to interpret
Pressure to maintain one’s appearance
An obsession with thinness can give rise to serious eating disorders
Young women who see magazine ads or TV commercials that feature ultra-thin models become more dissatisfied with their own bodies than those who view neutral materials
The cultural ideal for thinness may get set in childhood
Little relationship between youthful appearance and later happiness
People tend to associate with others who are similar to themselves
It’s the mere perception of similarity that draws people together
Demographic
Sharing the same race, ethnic background, age, religion, level of education, and occupation
People who go together tend to resemble each other more than randomly paired couples
People who share in demographics liked each other more than those who were dissimilar
People form social niches that are homogeneous and divided along the lines of demographic groups
Attitudes
Sharing the same opinions, interests, and values
People have to get to know each other first
Participants like other people better when they perceive their attitudes as being similar
Dissimilarity triggers repulsion (the desire to avoid someone)
We avoid associating with others who are dissimilar, and among those who remain, we are drawn to those who are most similar
Matching Hypothesis: The proposition that people are attracted to others who are similar in physical attractiveness
Men and women on online dating sites tended to contact and be contacted by others whose relative popularity on the site was similar to their own
People tend to shy away from making romantic pursuits with others who seem out of their league
Similarity in subjective experience
I-sharing: When two people at a common event bond over reactions, they feel as though they’ve shared a subjective experience
People who I-share, even if they’re otherwise dissimilar, feel a profound sense of connection to one another
Complementarity Hypothesis: People seek others whose needs oppose their own
No support for this view
Complementarity doesn’t make for compatible attraction
While opposites may seem exotic at first glance, over time the differences become difficult to negotiate
People prefer relationships that are psychologically balanced
A state of imbalance caused distress
We want to like the friends of our friends and the enemies of our enemies
We don’t expect our friends and enemies to get along
Reciprocity: A mutual exchange between what we give and what we receive
We tend to like others who indicate that they like us
People like others more when their affection takes time to earn than when it comes easy
People are drawn to members of the opposite sex who like them, but only when these others are selective and discriminating
We like those who are socially selective
Hard-to-get Effect: The tendency to prefer people who are highly selective in their social choices over those who are more readily available
We are turned off by those who reject us because they are committed to someone else or have no interest in us
We tend to prefer people who are moderately selective compared with those who are non-selective or too selective
Non-selective - having poor taste or low standards
Too selective - having very high taste
Individuals differ a great deal in terms of how selective they are
People who fear being single set lower standards, are less selective, and tolerate lesser relationships
The fear of being single leads people to settle for less desirable partners
Psychological Reactance: The proposition that people are highly motivated to protect their freedom to choose and behave as they please
People reassert themselves, often by wanting that which is unavailable too much
People of the opposite sex were seen as more attractive as the night wore on
Closing time posed a threat, which sparked desire, only to those on the lookout for a late-night date
Most men appear to be more sex-driven than most women
Human beings all over the world exhibit mate-selection patterns that favor the conception, birth, and survival of their offspring
Women must be highly selective because they are biologically limited in the number of children they can bear and raise in a lifetime
Must protect her children
Searches for a mate who possesses (or has the potential to possess) economic resources and is willing to commit those resources to support her offspring
Women should be attracted to men who are older and financially secure or who have ambition and other traits predictive of future success
Men can father an unlimited number of children and can ensure their reproductive success by inseminating many women, and are mainly focused on being certain that the babies being born are actually their own
Men seek out women who are young and physically attractive, attributes that signal health and reproductive fertility
Men should favor chastity, pursuing women they think will be sexually faithful
When mate seekers can’t have it all and must focus on what’s important, they prioritize their choices in the ways predicted by evolutionary theory
Universal tendency for men to seek younger women (who are most likely to be fertile) and for women to desire older men (who are most likely to have financial resources)
Men in their thirties seek out women who are 5 years younger
Men in their fifties prefer women 10 to 20 years younger
Girls and women of all ages are attracted to men who are older than they are
Teenage boys say they are most attracted to women who are slightly older than they are, women in their fertile twenties
The older men were, the more they wanted increasingly younger women
Women of all ages were more likely to seek out status information and men who were older
In the US, the mate preferences predicted by evolutionary theory persist throughout the lifespan
May have evolves as a sexually selected mating signal
Men flaunt their resources to attract women
Male and female stereotypes would suggest that men are more likely to chase sex and women seek love
When asked who “gets serious” first, 84% chose women
62% reported that the man said “I love you” first
Expression of love - how happy are they when the disclosure comes before sex compared to after?
Prior to sexual activity, men reported feeling happier and more positive about the expression of love than women did
Presex confession may signal interest in advancing a relationship to include sexual activity
After sexual activity, women reacted with somewhat more positive emotion
A postsex confession may more accurately signal a desire for long-term commitment
Jealousy: A negative emotional state that arises from a perceived threat to one’s relationship
Common and normal human reaction
A man should be most upset by sexual infidelity because a wife’s extramarital affair increases the risk that the children he supports aren’t his own
A women should feel more threatened by emotional infidelity because a husband who falls in love with another woman might leave and withdraw his financial support
Jealousy reactions are intensified among people who believe that there is a scarcity of potential mates
Men were more likely to accuse their partners of sexual infidelity
Women were more likely to accuse their partners of emotional infidelity
Jealous men were more likely to report that their rival had greater status / resources
Jealous women were more likely to report that their rival was younger / more attractive
Women trade youth and beauty for money not for reproductive purposes but rather because they often lack direct access to economic power
The more economic power women had, the more important male physical attractiveness was to them
Men get more upset over sexual infidelity not because of uncertain paternity but because they reasonably assume that a married woman who has a sexual affair is also likely to have intimate feelings for her extramarital partner
Although men and women react differently when asked to imagine a partner’s sexual or emotional infidelity, they are equally more upset by emotional infidelity when asked to recall actual experiences from a past relationship
Self-report differences typically found between the sexes are small compared to the similarities
Women desire physical attractiveness as much as men do when asked about what they want in a short-term casual sex partner
Does the stated preference reported match the actual preferences found in face-to-face interactions?
In practice, their attraction to each other was based on similar characteristics
Sex differences often observed are neither predictable nor universal
Intimate Relationships: A close relationship between two adults involving emotional attachment, fulfillment of psychological needs, or interdependence
Three basic components
Feelings of attachment, affection, and love
Fulfillment of psychological needs
Interdependence between partners, each of whom has a meaningful influence on the other
Not all intimate relationships contain all three ingredients
Empty Shell Marriage: A marriage that revolves around coordinated daily activities, but emotional attachment is weak and psychological needs go unmet
Relationships progress in order through a series of stages
Stimulus-Value-Role Theory
Stimulus Stage: Attraction is sparked by external attributes such as physical appearance
Value Stage: Attachment is based on similarity of values and beliefs
Role Stage: Commitment is based on the enactment of such roles as husband and wife
Most researchers don’t believe that intimate relationships progress through a fixed sequence of stages
Love depends on the experience of positive emotions in the presence of a partner
As the rewards pile up, love develops
As rewards diminish, love erodes
Social Exchange Theory: A perspective that views people as motivated to maximize benefits and minimize costs in their relationships with others
Relationships that provide more rewards and fewer costs will be more satisfying and endure longer
Dating couples who experience greater increases in rewards as their relationship progresses are more likely to stay together than are those who experience small increases or declines
Both rewards and costs start to contribute to levels of satisfaction
All people bring to a relationship certain expectations about the balance sheet to which they are entitled
Comparison Level
A person with a high CL expects their relationships to be rewarding
Someone with a low CL doesn’t expect their relationships to be rewarding
Situations that meet or exceed a person’s expectations are more satisfying than those who fall short
Comparison Level for Alternatives
People’s expectations about what they would receive in an alternative situation
If the rewards available elsewhere are believed to be high, a person will be less committed to staying in the present relationship
If people perceive that they have few acceptable alternatives, they will tend to remain, even in an unsatisfying relationship that fails to meet expectations
People who are in love tend to see their partners and relationships through rose-colored glasses
People in love tend to see other prospective partners as less appealing
Investment: Something a person puts into a relationship that they cannot recover if the relationship ends
Investments increase commitment
Commitment levels predict how long relationships will last
The best-adjusted relationships are those in which each partner is committed and sees the other as mutually committed
People who are highly committed are more likely to forgive and forget when their partners betray the relationship norm
The investment model can be used to predict whether battered women will remain in an abusive relationship
Equity Theory: The theory that people are most satisfied with a relationship when the ratio between benefits and contributions is similar for both partners
In an inequitable relationship, the balance is disturbed
The over-benefited partner receives more benefits than they deserve on the basis of contributions made
The under-benefited partner receives fewer benefits than deserved
Both overbenefit and underbenefit are unstable and unhappy states
Underbenefited partners feel angry and resentful because they’re giving more than their partner for the benefits they receive
Overbenefited partners feel guilty because they’re profiting unfairly
It is more unpleasant to feel underbenefited than overbenefited
Any partner in a close relationship may feel a need to restore the balance when they are feeling insecure
Trust-Insurance System: A natural, unconscious system employed by people in relationships in which they keep a tally of costs and benefits in order to detect and repair possible imbalances
On days after participants anxiously felt like they weren’t good enough for their partner, they were more likely to make sacrifices
Restorative actions were accompanied by lowered feelings of inferiority on the same day
On the next day, the partners who benefited from these actions expressed fewer doubts about their marriage
Equilibrium Model of Relationship Maintenance
People are motivated to preserve important relationships
Declines in satisfaction and commitment motivate threat-mitigating tactics
These tactics serve to restore levels of satisfaction and commitment
Exchange Relationship: A relationship in which the participants expect and desire strict reciprocity in their interactions
People want costs to be quickly offset by compensation
Communal Relationship: A relationship in which the participants expect and desire mutual responsiveness to each other’s needs
No regard for whether they have given or received a benefit
TikTok Example: There is a subsection of TikTok where ladies make lunches for their partners. These TikToks sometimes stir up controversy.
Commenters often feel that women shouldn’t have to make lunches for their partners and ask OPs what their partner does for them. This represents an exchange relationship
OP usually responds that their partner doesn’t need to do anything for them
They like making the lunches
Their partner works and this is a way to provide
The partner has to wake up early and comes home late and this is a way to fill a need
Making lunches is how they show love
Etc etc
This is an example of a communal relationship
Exchange relationships typically exist between strangers and casual acquaintances
Strong communal relationships are usually limited to close friends, romantic partners, and family members
Once a communal norm has been adopted in a relationship, the motivation to respond to the other’s needs becomes automatic
Adults exhibit specific learned attachment styles in their romantic relationships
Attachment Style: The way a person typically interacts with significant others
Secure Attachment: When babies cry in distress when the mother leaves them and beams with delight when she returns
Insecure Attachment
Avoidant-Insecure Attachment: When babies don’t react much when the mother leaves or when she returns
Anxious-Insecure Attachment: When babies cling and cry when the mother leaves and greets her with anger or apathy upon her return
Infants form internal working models of attachment figures and these models guide their relationships later in life
Infants classified as securely attached are later more positive in their outlook toward others
Adult relationship patterns are predictable from parent-child relations in adolescence
People who have a secure attachment style report having satisfying relationships that are happy, friendly, based on mutual trust, and enduring
Avoidant lovers fear intimacy and believe that romantic love is doomed to fade
Anxious lovers report a love life full of emotional highs and lows, obsessive preoccupation, and extreme sexual attraction and jealousy
Our attachment styles can be seen in our everyday behavior
People who are secure tend to have more lasting relationships
Although styles of attachment are modestly stable over time, they are not fixed
John Alan Lee
Three primary love styles
eros - erotic love
ludus - uncommitted love
storge - friendship love
Secondary love styles
mania - demanding and possessive love
pragma - pragmatic love
agape - altruistic love
Men tend to score higher than women on ludus
Women score higher on storge, mania, and pragma
Triangular Theory of Love
There are eight basic subtypes of love, and all can be derived from the presence or absence of three components
Intimacy: The emotional component, which involves liking and feelings of closeness
Passion: The motivational component, which contains drives that trigger attraction, romance, and sexual desire
Commitment: The cognitive component, which reflects the decision to make a long-term commitment to a loved partner
Passionate Love: Romantic love characterized by high arousal, intense attraction, and fear of rejection
Companionate Love: A secure, trusting, stable partnership
Passionate love is fueled by two ingredients
A heightened state of physiological arousal
The belief that this arousal was triggered by the beloved person
Can sometimes be hard to interpret
Excitation Transfer: The process whereby arousal caused by one stimulus is added to arousal from a second stimulus and the combined arousal is attributed to the second stimulus
Love at first fright
Arousal, even without distress, intensifies emotional reactions, positive or negative
Passionate love tends to diminish somewhat over time
Obsessional aspect of passionate love clearly diminishes in long-term relationships
A romantic aspect often endures
For some people, the intense love of their long-term partner may last for long periods of time
Form of affection that binds close friends as well as lovers
Less intense than passionate love
Deeper and more enduring than passionate love
Self-Disclosure: Revelations about the self that a person makes to others
The willingness to disclose intimate facts and feelings lies at the heart of our closest and most intimate relationships
The more emotionally involved people are in a close relationship, the more the self-disclose to each other
We disclose to people we like
We like people who disclose to us
We like people to whom we have disclosed
Partners reveal more to each other as their relationship grows over time
Social Penetration Theory: Relationships progress from superficial exchanges to more intimate ones
At first, people give relatively little of themselves to each other and receive little in return
Exchanges become
broader: covering more areas of their lives
deeper: involving more sensitive areas
Patterns of self-disclosure change according to the state of a relationship
Individuals differ in the tendency to share private, intimate thoughts with others
On average, women are more open than men
People in general are more self-disclosing to women than to men
Male friends seem to bond more by taking part in common activities
Physical attractiveness is more important to men all over the world
Financial resources are more important to women all over the world
In some countries, people valued chastity in a mate, but in others, chastity was either unimportant or negatively valued
Passionate love is a widespread and universal emotion
Romantic love is hardwired in the neurochemistry of the brain
Dopamine associated with highs of romantic passion
Also associated with the lows of rejection
Parallels between romantic love and substance addiction
Reported sexual activity was more frequent and more varied than anyone had expected
Respondents may not be honest in their disclosures
People differ in their interpretations of survey questions
Men view the world in more sexualized terms than women do
Women tend to underperceive sex
Men report being more promiscuous, more likely to think about sex, more permissive, and more likely to fantasize about sex with multiple partners
Most men desire more sex partners and more sexual variety than most women do
Sexual Orientation: A person’s preference for members of the same sex (homosexuality), opposite sex (heterosexuality), or both sexes (bisexuality)
An exclusive homosexual orientation is relatively rare among humans and other animals
3-4% in men, 1.5-2% in women
Homosexual behaviors are more common
Sexual orientation should be seen alone a continuum
Roots of homosexuality
Aristotle: Homosexuality is inborn, but strengthened by habit
Post-Freud psychoanalysts: Homosexuality stems from family dynamics, specifically a child’s overattachment to a parent of the same or opposite sex
Social Learning Theorists: Homosexuality stems from rewarding sexual experiences with same-sex peers in childhood
Little hard evidence to support these claims
In male homosexual brains, the nucleus was half the size of male heterosexual brains and comparable to female heterosexual brains