ABSTRACT

Mating intelligence can be defined as the set of cognitive abilities relevant to mating, courtship, and mate choice (Geher, Miller, & Murphy, this volume). As mating is such a crucial component of fitness, one would expect natural selection to have optimized the mental mechanisms that subserve strategies for selecting, understanding, and attracting mates. Yet, as differential psychologists have amply documented, there are abundant individual differences in sexual attitudes and behaviors. We will argue that much of this variation reflects stable personality dimensions. For example, Bailey and colleagues found substantial heritability for sexual promiscuity in a large-scale twin study (Bailey, Kirk, Zhu, Dunne, & Martin, 2000). Since these personality dimensions show substantial heritability (Bouchard & Loehlin, 2001), we must conclude that there is heritable variation in human mating-relevant cognitive mechanisms-and thus in mating strategies and perhaps mating intelligence.