Original article:

Big Five traits related to short-term mating: From personality to promiscuity across 46 nations

Evolutionary Psychology 6(2): 246-282 David P. Schmitt, Bradley University, Department of Psychology, Peoria, IL 61625, USA, dps@bradley.eduTodd K. Shackelford, Department of Psychology, Florida Atlantic University, USA.1

Abstract

As part of the International Sexuality Description Project, 13,243 participants from 46 nations responded to self-report measures of personality and mating behavior. Several traits showed consistent links with short-term mating. Extraversion positively correlated with interest in short-term mating, unrestricted sociosexuality, having engaged in short-term mate poaching attempts, having succumbed to short-term poaching attempts of others, and lacking relationship exclusivity. Low levels of agreeableness and conscientiousness also related to short-term mating, especially with extra-pair mating. Neuroticism and openness were associated with short-term mating as well, but these links were less consistent across sex and nation. Nation-level links between personality and sexuality replicated within-region findings, such as the strong association between national extraversion and national sociosexuality. Discussion focuses on the origins of personality-sexuality links and their implications across nations.

Keywords

Big Five; personality; cross-cultural psychology; evolutionary psychology; short- term mating; sexual behavior

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Evolutionary Psychology - An open access peer-reviewed journal - ISSN 1474-7049 © Ian Pitchford and Robert M. Young; individual articles © the author(s)
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