A Review of Sexual Selection and Human Evolution: How Mate Choice shaped Human Nature

The application of sexual selection theory to human behavior has been the greatest success story in evolutionary psychology, and one of the most fruitful and fascinating developments in the human sciences over the last two decades. Ironically, this development would have seemed absurd only twenty years ago. At that time, many biologists considered sexual selection through mate choice to be Darwin's least successful idea: if not outright wrong, it was at most a minor, uninteresting, even pathological evolutionary process. At that time, any "Darwinization" of the human sciences would have had to rely on natural selection theory, which bears much less directly on human social, sexual, and cultural behavior. Instead, something remarkable happened: sexual selection theory was revived over the last two decades through the combined efforts of researchers in theoretical population genetics, experimental behavioral biology, primatology, evolutionary anthropology, and evolutionary psychology. Today, although natural selection theory serves as the conceptual and rhetorical foundation for evolutionary psychology (see Tooby & Cosmides, 1990, 1992), sexual selection theory seems to guide more actual day-to-day research (see Buss, 1994; Ridley, 1993; Wright, 1994). This chapter reviews the current state of sexual selection theory, and outlines some applications to understanding human behavior. Sexual selection theory has been revived so recently that, while extraordinary opportunities exist for further research, many old misconceptions persist. These include the mistaken ideas that sexual selection:(1) always produces sex differences,(2) does not operate in monogamous species,(3) is weaker than natural selection, and(4) had nothing to do with the evolution of human intelligence, language, or creativity. One goal of this chapter will be to dispel some of these myths, and to bring evolutionary psychology up to date with respect to the biological literature on sexual selection. Sections 2 through 4 review the history and basic theory of sexual selection. Sections 5 and 6 contextualized human mate choice by covering sexual selection in primates and hominids. Sections 7 through 9 survey some possible roles of mate choice in shaping the human body, the human mind, and human culture. Finally, section 10 concludes with some academic and existential implications of applying sexual selection theory to understand htiinan nature.

[1]  Paul E Mullen,et al.  Homicide , 2000, Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Psychological Science.

[2]  M. Watve The Red Queen: Sex and the evolution of human nature , 1998 .

[3]  G. Miller How mate choice shaped human nature: A review of sexual selection and human evolution. , 1998 .

[4]  P. Gowaty,et al.  "Male Aggression Against Women: An Evolutionary Perspective." , 1997 .

[5]  R. Thornhill,et al.  The evolution of human sexuality. , 1996, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[6]  C. Brand Race, evolution, and behavior : a life history perspective , 1995 .

[7]  Ian Watts,et al.  The Human Symbolic Revolution: A Darwinian Account , 1995, Cambridge Archaeological Journal.

[8]  F. Eeckman,et al.  Evolution and Biocomputation: Computational Models of Evolution , 1995 .

[9]  Peter M. Todd,et al.  The Role of Mate Choice in Biocomputation: Sexual Selection as a Process of Search, Optimization and Diversification , 1995, Evolution and Biocomputation.

[10]  R. Martin,et al.  The Cambridge encyclopedia of human evolution , 1994 .

[11]  E. Balaban,et al.  Sexual selection and the evolution of sex differences. , 1994 .

[12]  J. Freyd Circling Creativity , 1994 .

[13]  Geoffrey F. Miller,et al.  Exploiting Mate Choice in Evolutionary Computation: Sexual Selection as a Process of Search, Optimization, And Diversification , 1994, Evolutionary Computing, AISB Workshop.

[14]  D. Sperber The modularity of thought and the epidemiology of representations. , 1994 .

[15]  D. Perrett,et al.  Facial shape and judgements of female attractiveness , 1994, Nature.

[16]  R. Wright The moral animal : evolutionary psychology and everyday life , 1995 .

[17]  R. Thornhill,et al.  Fluctuating asymmetry and sexual selection. , 1994, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[18]  R. Martin,et al.  The evolution of sexual size dimorphism in primates , 1994 .

[19]  S. Pinker The Language Instinct , 1994 .

[20]  L. Cosmides,et al.  Mapping the mind: Origins of domain specificity: The evolution of functional organization , 1994 .

[21]  B. Charlesworth,et al.  Inbreeding Versus Outbreeding@@@The Natural History of Inbreeding and Outbreeding. , 1993 .

[22]  D. Perrett,et al.  What Gives a Face its Gender? , 1993, Perception.

[23]  Peter M. Todd,et al.  Parental Guidance Suggested: How Parental Imprinting Evolves Through Sexual Selection as an Adaptive Learning Mechanism , 1993, Adapt. Behav..

[24]  J. Endler Some general comments on the evolution and design of animal communication systems. , 1993, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.

[25]  T. Bakker Positive genetic correlation between female preference and preferred male ornament in sticklebacks , 1993, Nature.

[26]  D. Buss,et al.  Sexual strategies theory: an evolutionary perspective on human mating. , 1993, Psychological review.

[27]  D. Schluter,et al.  Sexual selection when the female directly benefits , 1993 .

[28]  F. Hunter,et al.  Mutual sexual selection in a monogamous seabird , 1993, Nature.

[29]  M. Enquist,et al.  Selection of exaggerated male traits by female aesthetic senses , 1993, Nature.

[30]  In Search of the Neanderthals: Solving the Puzzle of Human Origins , 1993 .

[31]  C. Wills The runaway brain : the evolution of human uniqueness , 1993 .

[32]  M. F. Small Female Choices: Sexual Behavior of Female Primates , 1993 .

[33]  D. Stuss,et al.  Cognitive neuroscience. , 1993, Current opinion in neurobiology.

[34]  E. Martins The Comparative Method in Evolutionary Biology, Paul H. Harvey, Mark D. Pagel. Oxford University Press, Oxford (1991), vii, + 239 Price $24.95 paperback , 1992 .

[35]  S. Pruett-Jones,et al.  Independent Versus Nonindependent Mate Choice: Do Females Copy Each Other? , 1992, The American Naturalist.

[36]  H. Fisher Anatomy of Love: The Natural History of Monogamy, Adultery, and Divorce , 1992 .

[37]  M. Gross,et al.  Female mate preference enhances offspring growth and reproduction in a fish, Poecilia reticulata , 1992, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.

[38]  M. Petrie,et al.  Peacocks with low mating success are more likely to suffer predation , 1992, Animal Behaviour.

[39]  M. Wilson The ant and the peacock: altruism and sexual selection from darwin to today , 1992 .

[40]  C. D. Ankney,et al.  Sex differences in relative brain size: The mismeasure of woman, too? , 1992 .

[41]  R. Thornhill,et al.  The evolutionary psychology of men's coercive sexuality , 1992, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[42]  Robin I. M. Dunbar Neocortex size as a constraint on group size in primates , 1992 .

[43]  Lee Alan Dugatkin,et al.  Sexual Selection and Imitation: Females Copy the Mate Choice of Others , 1992, The American Naturalist.

[44]  M. Ryan,et al.  Directional Patterns of Female Mate Choice and the Role of Sensory Biases , 1992, The American Naturalist.

[45]  J. Endler Signals, Signal Conditions, and the Direction of Evolution , 1992, The American Naturalist.

[46]  J. Simpson,et al.  Sociosexuality and Romantic Partner Choice , 1992 .

[47]  A. Rogers,et al.  QUANTITATIVE GENETICS OF SEXUAL DIMORPHISM IN HUMAN BODY SIZE , 1992, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[48]  M Kirkpatrick Direct selection of female mating preferences: comments on Grafen's models. , 1992, Journal of theoretical biology.

[49]  D. Buss Mate preference mechanisms: Consequences for partner choice and intrasexual competition. , 1992 .

[50]  M. Batten Sexual Strategies: How Females Choose Their Mates , 1992 .

[51]  L. Cosmides,et al.  The Adapted mind : evolutionary psychology and the generation of culture , 1992 .

[52]  Yoh Iwasa,et al.  THE EVOLUTION OF COSTLY MATE PREFERENCES I. FISHER AND BIASED MUTATION , 1991, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[53]  A. Zahavi On the definition of sexual selection, Fisher's model, and the evolution of waste and of signals in general , 1991, Animal Behaviour.

[54]  T. Guilford,et al.  Receiver psychology and the evolution of animal signals , 1991, Animal Behaviour.

[55]  N. W. Thornhill,et al.  An evolutionary analysis of rules regulating human inbreeding and marriage , 1991, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[56]  Frederick S. Szalay,et al.  Evolution of permanent estrus displays in hominids , 1991 .

[57]  M. Cunningham,et al.  Article Commentary: Averaged Faces Are Attractive, but Very Attractive Faces Are Not Average , 1991 .

[58]  A. Balmford Mate choice on leks. , 1991, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[59]  W. Eberhard,et al.  COPULATORY COURTSHIP AND CRYPTIC FEMALE CHOICE IN INSECTS , 1991 .

[60]  W. Atmar On the role of males , 1991, Animal Behaviour.

[61]  M. Petrie,et al.  Peahens prefer peacocks with elaborate trains , 1991, Animal Behaviour.

[62]  L. Margulis,et al.  Mystery Dance: On the Evolution of Human Sexuality , 1991 .

[63]  J. Lancaster A feminist and evolutionary biologist looks at women , 1991 .

[64]  R. Plomin,et al.  Human behavioral genetics. , 1991, Annual review of psychology.

[65]  M. Kirkpatrick,et al.  The evolution of mating preferences and the paradox of the lek , 1991, Nature.

[66]  A. Basolo Female Preference Predates the Evolution of the Sword in Swordtail Fish , 1990, Science.

[67]  P. Trail WHY SHOULD LEK‐BREEDERS BE MONOMORPHIC? , 1990, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[68]  M. Gross,et al.  Costs and Benefits of Female Mate Choice: Is There a Lek Paradox? , 1990, The American Naturalist.

[69]  L. Cosmides,et al.  The past explains the present: Emotional adaptations and the structure of ancestral environments , 1990 .

[70]  A. Grafen Biological signals as handicaps. , 1990, Journal of theoretical biology.

[71]  J. Endler,et al.  Correlated Evolution of Female Mating Preferences and Male Color Patterns in the Guppy Poecilia reticulata , 1990, Science.

[72]  Bobbi S. Low,et al.  Marriage Systems and Pathogen Stress in Human Societies , 1990 .

[73]  M. Boyce The Red Queen Visits Sage Grouse Leks , 1990 .

[74]  W. Hamilton,et al.  Sexual reproduction as an adaptation to resist parasites (a review). , 1990, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[75]  J. Langlois,et al.  Attractive Faces Are Only Average , 1990 .

[76]  Mark Kirkpatrick,et al.  THE DARWIN‐FISHER THEORY OF SEXUAL SELECTION IN MONOGAMOUS BIRDS , 1990, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[77]  Read Online,et al.  The scented ape : the biology and culture of human odour , 1990 .

[78]  M. Ryan Sexual selection, sensory systems and sensory exploitation. , 1990 .

[79]  G. Hoelzer The good parent process of sexual selection , 1989, Animal Behaviour.

[80]  J. Heywood SEXUAL SELECTION BY THE HANDICAP MECHANISM , 1989, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[81]  J. P. Rushton,et al.  Genetic similarity, human altruism, and group selection , 1989, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[82]  J. Barkow,et al.  Darwin, sex, and status , 1989 .

[83]  R. Byrne,et al.  Machiavellian intelligence : social expertise and the evolution of intellect in monkeys, apes, and humans , 1990 .

[84]  Marina Cords,et al.  Primate Social Systems, Robin I.M. Dunbar. Christopher Helm, London (1988), viii, +373. Price £35.00 hardback, £17.50 paperback , 1988 .

[85]  I. F. Harvey Sexual Selection: Testing the Alternatives, Jack W. Bradbury, Malte B. Andersson (Eds.). John Wiley, Chichester (1987), xi , 1988 .

[86]  N. Burley Wild zebra finches have band-colour preferences , 1988, Animal Behaviour.

[87]  W. Rice HERITABLE VARIATION IN FITNESS AS A PREREQUISITE FOR ADAPTIVE FEMALE CHOICE: THE EFFECT OF MUTATION‐SELECTION BALANCE , 1988, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[88]  F. Bercovitch Primate Societies, B. Smuts, D. Cheney, R. Seyfarth, R. Wrangham, T. Struhsaker (Eds.). The Univesity of Chicago Press, Chicago (1987), xii , 1988 .

[89]  A. Møller,et al.  Female choice selects for male sexual tail ornaments in the monogamous swallow , 1988, Nature.

[90]  A. Kondrashov Deleterious mutations as an evolutionary factor. III. Mating preference and some general remarks. , 1988, Journal of theoretical biology.

[91]  I. Tomlinson Diploid models of the handicap principle , 1988, Heredity.

[92]  R. Thornhill,et al.  Female Primate Sexual Behavior and Conception: Are There Really Sperm to Spare? [and Comments and Reply] , 1988, Current Anthropology.

[93]  M. Chance,et al.  Social behaviour and primate evolution. , 1988 .

[94]  Andrew Pomiankowski,et al.  The evolution of female mating preferences for male genetic quality , 1988 .

[95]  M. Dawkins,et al.  Darwin and the Emergence of Evolutionary Theories of Mind and Behavior , 1988 .

[96]  Robin I. M. Dunbar Despotism and Differential Reproduction. A Darwinian View of History, Laura L. Betzig. Aldine, New York (1986), xi, + 171. Price DM 89 , 1987 .

[97]  A. Pomiankowski The costs of choice in sexual selection. , 1987, Journal of theoretical biology.

[98]  C. Catchpole,et al.  Bird song, sexual selection and female choice. , 1987, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[99]  B. Smuts Sexual competition and mate choice , 1987 .

[100]  Robert A. Foley,et al.  Another Unique Species: Patterns in Human Evolutionary Ecology , 1987 .

[101]  John Tooby,et al.  From evolution to behavior: Evolutionary psychology as the missing link. , 1987 .

[102]  B. Low,et al.  Human hips, breasts and buttocks: Is fat deceptive? , 1987 .

[103]  S. Gould Freudian slip. , 1987, Natural history.

[104]  A. Arak The Túngara Frog: A Study in Sexual Selection and Communication, Michael J. Ryan. University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London (1985), xv, +230. Price £27.95 hardback, £12.75 paperback , 1986 .

[105]  M. Andersson EVOLUTION OF CONDITION‐DEPENDENT SEX ORNAMENTS AND MATING PREFERENCES: SEXUAL SELECTION BASED ON VIABILITY DIFFERENCES , 1986, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[106]  N. Burley,et al.  Social Evolution, Robert Trivers. Benjamin/Cummings, Menlo Park, Calfornia (1985), xvii, +462, Price £19.95 in U.K., $18.95 in U.S.A. (paperback) , 1986 .

[107]  S. Wasser Infanticide: Comparative and Evolutionary Perspectives, Glen Hausfater, Sarah Blaffer Hrdy (Eds.). Aldine, New York (1984), xxxix , 1986 .

[108]  D. Buss,et al.  Human Mate Selection , 2020 .

[109]  Desmond Morris Bodywatching: A Field Guide to the Human Species , 1985 .

[110]  F. Newcombe,et al.  Human sexual dimorphism , 1985 .

[111]  M. Zuckerman,et al.  Sensation seeking: A comparative approach to a human trait , 1984, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[112]  Robin I. M. Dunbar Sex, Evolution, and Behavior, 2nd Edition, Martin Daly, Margo Wilson. Willard Grant Press, Boston (1983), xiv, +402. Price £15.75 (paperback) , 1984 .

[113]  C. Starr,et al.  Sperm competition and the evolution of animal mating systems , 1984 .

[114]  P. Harvey,et al.  18 – Sperm Competition, Testes Size, and Breeding Systems in Primates , 1984 .

[115]  M. West-Eberhard Sexual selection, competitive communication and species specific signals in insects , 1984 .

[116]  M. Wade,et al.  THE EVOLUTION OF INSECT MATING SYSTEMS. , 1984, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[117]  J. Masson Freud, Biologist of the Mind: Beyond the Psychoanalytic Legend. , 1983 .

[118]  Richard J. Goss,et al.  Deer Antlers: Regeneration, Function and Evolution , 1983 .

[119]  W. Searcy THE EVOLUTIONARY EFFECTS OF MATE SELECTION , 1982 .

[120]  W. Hamilton,et al.  Heritable true fitness and bright birds: a role for parasites? , 1982, Science.

[121]  M. Andersson,et al.  Sexual selection, natural selection and quality advertisement , 1982 .

[122]  E. Wilson,et al.  From genes to culture: The missing links , 1982, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[123]  M. Kirkpatrick SEXUAL SELECTION AND THE EVOLUTION OF FEMALE CHOICE , 1982, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[124]  Donald A. Dewsbury,et al.  Effects of novelty of copulatory behavior: The Coolidge effect and related phenomena. , 1981 .

[125]  J. Lockard,et al.  Human serial polygyny: Demographic, reproductive, marital, and divorce data , 1981 .

[126]  E. Simons,et al.  Sexual dimorphism in early anthropoids , 1980, Nature.

[127]  Barbara Gregg,et al.  Human Assortative Mating and Genetic Equilibrium: An Evolutionary Perspective , 1980 .

[128]  P. O'donald Genetic Models of Sexual Selection , 1980 .

[129]  L. Partridge Mate choice increases a component of offspring fitness in fruit flies , 1980, Nature.

[130]  N. Burley The Evolution of Concealed Ovulation , 1979, The American Naturalist.

[131]  S. Hrdy,et al.  Infanticide among animals: A review, classification, and examination of the implications for the reproductive strategies of females , 1979 .

[132]  T. E. Moore,et al.  Sexual Selection and Reproductive Competition in Insects , 1979 .

[133]  Napoleon A. Chagnon,et al.  Evolutionary biology and human social behavior: An anthropological perspective , 1979 .

[134]  R. Seyfarth Social Relationships Among Adult Male and Female Baboons. I. Behaviour During Sexual Consortship , 1978 .

[135]  R. Dawkins,et al.  Animal signals: information or manipulation? , 1978 .

[136]  G. Holton Sociobiology: the new synthesis? , 1977, Newsletter on science, technology & human values.

[137]  J. Elshtain Against Our Will. Men, Women and Rape , 1976, Telos.

[138]  J. Krebs,et al.  Sexual selection and the handicap principle , 1976, Nature.

[139]  N. Humphrey The Social Function of Intellect , 1976 .

[140]  G. C. Williams Sex and evolution. , 1975, Monographs in population biology.

[141]  A. Zahavi Mate selection-a selection for a handicap. , 1975, Journal of theoretical biology.

[142]  R. Trivers Parental investment and sexual selection , 1972 .

[143]  Taher A. Razik,et al.  Explorations in creativity , 1967 .

[144]  A. Gray,et al.  I. THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES BY MEANS OF NATURAL SELECTION , 1963 .

[145]  B. Bernstein,et al.  Animal Behavior , 1927, Japanese Marine Life.

[146]  D. Campbell Blind variation and selective retention in creative thought as in other knowledge processes. , 1960, Psychological review.

[147]  C. Pigott Genetics and the Origin of Species , 1959, Nature.

[148]  Frank A. Beach,et al.  Patterns of Sexual Behavior , 1951 .

[149]  J. Cunningham Evolution of Man , 1950, Nature.

[150]  A. Bateman,et al.  Intra-sexual selection in Drosophila , 1948, Heredity.

[151]  A. D. Ritchie The Creative Mind , 1946, Nature.

[152]  E. Poulton Adaptive Coloration in Animals , 1940, Nature.

[153]  R A Fisher,et al.  The evolution of sexual preference. , 1915, The Eugenics review.

[154]  H. Ellis Sexual selection in man , 1905 .

[155]  F. D. Evolution and Adaptation , 1904, Nature.

[156]  William Cronon,et al.  On Human Nature , 2022, Nature.

[157]  W. R. Smith The History of Human Marriage , 1891, Nature.

[158]  R. Meldola Sexual Selection , 1871, Nature.

[159]  P. S.,et al.  Contributions to the Theory of Natural Selection , 1870, Nature.

[160]  Nisa Nisa , 2022 .