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Biological Reviews
Original Article

Possible evolutionary origins of human female sexual fluidity

Satoshi Kanazawa

Corresponding Author

E-mail address:S.Kanazawa@lse.ac.uk

Managerial Economics and Strategy Group, Department of Management, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, UK

Address for correspondence (Tel: +44 (0)20 7955 7297; E‐mail:

S.Kanazawa@lse.ac.uk

).
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First published: 16 May 2016
Cited by: 6

ABSTRACT

I propose an evolutionary theory of human female sexual fluidity and argue that women may have been evolutionarily designed to be sexually fluid in order to allow them to have sex with their cowives in polygynous marriage and thus reduce conflict and tension inherent in such marriage. In addition to providing an extensive definition and operationalization of the concept of sexual fluidity and specifying its ultimate function for women, the proposed theory can potentially solve several theoretical and empirical puzzles in evolutionary psychology and sex research. Analyses of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) confirm the theory's predictions that: (i) women (but not men) who experience increased levels of sexual fluidity have a larger number of children (suggesting that female sexual fluidity, if heritable, may be evolutionarily selected); (ii) women (but not men) who experience marriage or parenthood early in adult life subsequently experience increased levels of sexual fluidity; and (iii) sexual fluidity is significantly positively correlated with known markers of unrestricted sexual orientation among women whereas it is significantly negatively correlated with such markers among men.

Number of times cited: 6

  • , The evolution of same-sex attraction: Exploring women's willingness to have sex with other women in order to satisfy their partners, Personality and Individual Differences, 124, (135), (2018).
  • , Who Adopts Queer and Pansexual Sexual Identities?, The Journal of Sex Research, 54, 7, (911), (2017).
  • , Are Women Sexually Fluid? The Nature of Female Same-Sex Attraction and Its Evolutionary Origins, Evolutionary Psychological Science, (2017).
  • , Why Sexual Plasticity in Women Is Unlikely to be an Adaptation to Reduce Conflict in Polygynous Marriages, Archives of Sexual Behavior, 46, 2, (329), (2017).
  • , Homosexuality Paradox, The, Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Psychological Science, 10.1007/978-3-319-16999-6_40-1, (1-9), (2016).
  • , Not Straight and Not Straightforward: the Relationships Between Sexual Orientation, Sociosexuality, and Dark Triad Traits in Women, Evolutionary Psychological Science, 10.1007/s40806-017-0111-y, (2017).