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British Journal of Psychology
Original Article

Altruism predicts mating success in humans

Steven Arnocky

Corresponding Author

E-mail address:stevena@nipissingu.ca

Department of Psychology, Nipissing UniversityNorth Bay, Ontario, Canada

Correspondence should be addressed to Steven Arnocky, Department of Psychology, Nipissing University, 100 College Drive, North Bay, ON, Canada P1B 8L7 (email: E-mail address:stevena@nipissingu.ca).
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Tina Piché

Department of Psychology, Nipissing UniversityNorth Bay, Ontario, Canada

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Graham Albert

Department of Psychology, Nipissing UniversityNorth Bay, Ontario, Canada

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Danielle Ouellette

Department of Psychology, Nipissing UniversityNorth Bay, Ontario, Canada

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Pat Barclay

Department of Psychology, University of GuelphCanada

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First published: 18 July 2016
Cited by: 3

Abstract

In order for non‐kin altruism to evolve, altruists must receive fitness benefits for their actions that outweigh the costs. Several researchers have suggested that altruism is a costly signal of desirable qualities, such that it could have evolved by sexual selection. In two studies, we show that altruism is broadly linked with mating success. In Study 1, participants who scored higher on a self‐report altruism measure reported they were more desirable to the opposite sex, as well as reported having more sex partners, more casual sex partners, and having sex more often within relationships. Sex moderated some of these relationships, such that altruism mattered more for men's number of lifetime and casual sex partners. In Study 2, participants who were willing to donate potential monetary winnings (in a modified dictator dilemma) reported having more lifetime sex partners, more casual sex partners, and more sex partners over the past year. Men who were willing to donate also reported having more lifetime dating partners. Furthermore, these patterns persisted, even when controlling for narcissism, Big Five personality traits, and socially desirable responding. These results suggest that altruists have higher mating success than non‐altruists and support the hypothesis that altruism is a sexually selected costly signal of difficult‐to‐observe qualities.

Number of times cited: 3

  • , Relationships between two types of reputational concern and altruistic behavior in daily life, Personality and Individual Differences, 121, (19), (2018).
  • , Endorsement of Social and Personal Values Predicts the Desirability of Men and Women as Long-Term Partners, Evolutionary Psychology, 15, 4, (147470491774238), (2017).
  • , Reciprocal Altruism (Middle-Level Theory in Evolutionary Psychology), Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Psychological Science, 10.1007/978-3-319-16999-6_3598-1, (1-10), (2016).