Deck 15: Evolution and Human Behavior

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Question
According to evolutionary psychologists, the environment of evolutionary adaptedness

A) is long gone.
B) has not yet arrived.
C) is here now.
D) never existed.
Use Space or
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to flip the card.
Question
The expression of ________ traits is most sensitive to environmental conditions.

A) hormonal
B) behavioral
C) morphological
D) physiological
Question
Evolutionary psychologists argue specifically that human brains are designed to solve problems involving

A) living things.
B) reciprocal altruism between people.
C) selective arguments.
D) science and technology.
Question
It is generally agreed that complex adaptations

A) evolve slowly.
B) can evolve in short amounts of time.
C) do not evolve by natural selection.
D) arise in ways we cannot understand.
Question
Opposition to the use of evolutionary theory is most intense when it is applied to

A) nonhuman primates.
B) early hominins.
C) the physiology of modern humans.
D) the behavior of modern humans.
Question
The way genes are expressed-in the phenotype-is influenced by which of the following?

A) the genes of the parents
B) the local environment
C) the age of the organism
D) the culture
Question
Offspring of outbred matings have ________ offspring of inbred matings.

A) lower fitness than
B) the same fitness as
C) higher fitness than
D) more variable fitness than
Question
Phenotypic traits result from

A) learning.
B) genes.
C) an interaction of genes and environment.
D) the environment.
Question
An evolutionary approach to human behavior

A) implies that differences in behavior among humans are the product of genetic differences between individuals.
B) does not imply that differences in behavior among humans are the product of genetic differences between individuals.
C) is possible only because humans have a fossil record.
D) could not be done prior to the discovery of genetics and DNA.
Question
The logic of evolutionary psychology is based on which of the following precepts?

A) Brains are made up of many special-purpose subcomponents adapted to solve specific real-life problems.
B) Brains are general-purpose machines adapted to solve many different problems.
C) Brains evolved through drift-like processes.
D) Brains of humans are capable of solving problems faced by all species of mammal.
Question
Which of the following statements about flexible behavioral traits is true?

A) They cannot be shaped by natural selection because they are too sensitive to environmental conditions.
B) They can be shaped by natural selection because they are sensitive to environmental conditions.
C) They can be shaped by natural selection only if they are canalized.
D) They are not under natural selection; genetic drift determines behavioral traits.
Question
The "nature-nurture question" proposes that

A) people vary simply because they have different genes and live in different environments.
B) there is a clear distinction between the effects of genes (nature) and the effects of the environment (nurture).
C) the expression of genes is dependent upon the local environment.
D) all of human behavior is determined by genes.
Question
Evolutionary psychologists believe the human mind evolved to solve the challenges that confront food foragers because

A) foraging is more time-consuming than agriculture.
B) humans have practiced foraging for most of our evolutionary history.
C) sexual division of labor is clearly evident in the fossil record.
D) foraging requires greater skill compared with agriculture.
Question
The logic of evolutionary psychology begins with the precept that

A) people are adapted to modern ways of life.
B) complex adaptations evolve quickly.
C) natural selection creates psychologies in animals in such a way as to solve specific adaptive problems.
D) humans evolved in stratified societies and high population density.
Question
Behavioral traits are ________ morphological traits.

A) less genetic than
B) more canalized than
C) less canalized than
D) determined in the same manner as
Question
Which of the following statements is true?

A) Phenotypic traits result from either an individual's genes or from the impact of the environment, but not from both factors.
B) Kristaps is tall because his genes specified that he'd be tall.
C) The expression of any genotype depends on the environment.
D) Genes are like blueprints specifying an individual's phenotype.
Question
Evolutionary psychologists believe that the human mind evolved to

A) deal with the pressures of living in densely populated urban areas.
B) allow humans to create increasingly more complicated technology.
C) solve the challenges of a foraging lifestyle.
D) avoid predators.
Question
Which of the following statements correctly describes inbreeding?

A) It increases the chances of deleterious recessive alleles coming together in one individual.
B) It is bad because individuals with families have more defects than individuals without families.
C) It decreases the chances of deleterious recessives coming together in one individual.
D) It is good because it removes deleterious alleles from the population.
Question
Which of the following statements is true?

A) Genes are like blueprints that specify phenotypes.
B) The expression of any genotype always depends on the environment.
C) There is a clear distinction between the effects of genes and the effects of the environment.
D) People vary only because their genes carry different specifications.
Question
One problem with the concept of the environment of evolutionary adaptedness is that

A) there is little fossil evidence from 240-40 ka.
B) some scientists believe that small-scale agricultural communities would make a better model.
C) our ancestors did not practice inbreeding avoidance.
D) modern hunter-gatherers are different from our ancestors in many ways.
Question
Evolutionary theory predicts that human males should choose females who

A) are older than they are.
B) have high reproductive value.
C) have had many sexual partners.
D) are not symmetrical.
Question
Humans rarely mate with close relatives because

A) culture stops us from doing what we really desire.
B) childhood propinquity stifles desire.
C) natural selection cannot stop the power of culture.
D) it is prohibited in most religions.
Question
In Buss's cross-cultural survey, which of the following traits did males value more than females?

A) ambition and industriousness
B) good looks
C) virginity
D) sexual experience
Question
The advantage of outbreeding over inbreeding, and why inbreeding is avoided in humans and other primates, is that it

A) reduces the risk of the expression of deleterious alleles.
B) reduces the risk of heterozygosity.
C) increases the likelihood of the expression of deleterious alleles.
D) increases the likelihood of homozygosity.
Question
Which of the following statements is true?

A) There are no gender differences related to preferred age of mates and preferred number of partners.
B) Men tend to marry younger women, but this difference decreases as men age; in comparison, there is a greater age difference between women and their husbands.
C) Regarding new relationships, it seems that men tend to underestimate women's sexual interest, while women tend to overestimate men's interest in commitment.
D) Regarding new relationships, it seems that men tend to overestimate women's sexual interest, while women tend to underestimate men's interest in commitment.
Question
If you have one deleterious recessive allele that causes early death in its homozygous state, what is the probability that an offspring by you and your full sibling would acquire the lethal disease?

A) 1:1
B) 1:2
C) 1:4
D) 1:8
Question
Natural selection should favor behaviors that

A) reduce mating with relatives.
B) increase mating with relatives.
C) increase mating with siblings but not parents.
D) decrease the chances of outbred matings.
Question
In Buss's cross-cultural survey, which of the following traits did females value more than males?

A) ambition and industriousness
B) good looks
C) virginity
D) youth
Question
Taboos about who is an eligible marriage partner can be

A) examples of inbreeding avoidance mechanisms.
B) so important that they are genetically determined.
C) found in only a few cultures.
D) cultural constructs that rarely address the genetic requirement to avoid inbreeding.
Question
Third-party attitudes toward incest arise when individuals extend their own aversion to incest to others in the society in which they live, viewing incest by others with disdain. What else is true of this phenomenon?

A) Individuals who grew up with only same-sex siblings have the greatest aversion to incest by other adults.
B) Individuals who grew up only with opposite-sex siblings have the greatest aversion to incest by other adults.
C) Third-party attitudes are genetically coded, so they vary little with the individual's particular history.
D) Third-party aversion is a discredited concept replaced by recent research in evolutionary psychology.
Question
Nonhuman primates avoid close inbreeding by

A) not recognizing closely related individuals as members of the opposite sex.
B) the transfer of one sex at sexual maturity to distant groups.
C) coercion by other group members who alarm call if a mating attempt happens.
D) preventing the female from ovulating if a closely related male is in the vicinity.
Question
Evolutionary theory predicts that human females should choose males who

A) can provide the most resources.
B) are younger than they are.
C) have had many sexual partners.
D) are not symmetrical.
Question
Among nonhuman primates, which of the following statements about inbreeding is true?

A) It is common.
B) It is rare.
C) It occurs when animals are bored.
D) It is avoided only with siblings.
Question
Which of the following is evidence that psychological mechanisms reduce the chance of close inbreeding?

A) Taiwanese minor marriages
B) first-party attitudes toward incest
C) people who move to a kibbutz in their teens
D) domestic situations where the wife moves to the husband's group after marriage
Question
Generally, Buss's cross-cultural data show that

A) only females value traits in a mate that facilitate a long-term relationship.
B) males and females do not differ from each other in ways consistent with evolutionary theory.
C) males value female promiscuity more than females value male promiscuity.
D) cultural differences and gender differences both contribute to mate preferences.
Question
When a sister mates with her brother, there is a ________ chance that he will carry the same deleterious recessive gene that she does.

A) 50%
B) 25%
C) 100%
D) 75%
Question
Which of the following statements correctly describes incest prohibitions?

A) They exist in 50% of societies for brothers and sisters.
B) They do not exist for distant kin.
C) They conform to genetic categories.
D) They do not always conform to genetic categories.
Question
If the coefficient of relatedness between mates is 50%, and both are heterozygous for a deleterious recessive allele, Mendel's laws predict that ________ of their offspring will be homozygous recessive and die.

A) 25%
B) 50%
C) 75%
D) 100%
Question
Which of the following statements about Taiwanese minor marriages is true?

A) They produce about 80% fewer children than other arranged marriages.
B) They are much less likely to end in separation or divorce.
C) They rarely result in infidelity.
D) They were possible when parents had greater control over their children's actions.
Question
In Buss's cross-cultural survey of mate preferences, he found that males and females cared most about

A) chastity.
B) good health.
C) mutual attraction and love.
D) good sex.
Question
A woman's ________ peaks in her twenties and then steadily declines until she reaches menopause, when it drops to zero.

A) fertility
B) sexuality
C) reproductive value
D) fecundity
Question
Discuss the evidence supporting incest avoidance in nonhuman primates. Please give examples.
Question
Although men typically prefer a larger number of sexual partners than women do, which of the following is true?

A) Men are less open to mating opportunities that do not involve long-term commitments.
B) This result is almost identical in all cultures.
C) In some cultures, men and women differed more greatly than in others.
D) Men prefer women who are older than they are.
Question
Why is evolutionary theory relevant to behavior even though behavior is sensitive to environmental conditions?
Question
Discuss the effect of arranged marriages between minors in Taiwanese societies and whether those unions are more or less successful than more modern-style unions.
Question
Kipsigis women who reach menarche early

A) have longer reproductive life spans.
B) have decreased fertility.
C) have lower offspring survivorship.
D) increase their chances of having pregnancies end in spontaneous abortions.
Question
According to research by David Buss, when individuals first meet someone to whom they are attracted, women are more likely than men to

A) be cautious about their partner's intentions.
B) make more false-positive errors.
C) overestimate men's commitment.
D) minimize the chance of missing sexual opportunities.
Question
Kipsigis men may assess the reproductive potential of prospective brides by

A) counting a woman's number of previous sexual partners.
B) calculating their age at menarche.
C) their weight.
D) their height.
Question
Bridewealth payment among the Kipsigis is dependent on the

A) wealth of the groom.
B) size of the groom's father's herd of cattle and goats.
C) age of menarche of the bride.
D) groom's father's wealth.
Question
What is bridewealth?

A) the monetary worth of a bride
B) the reproductive value of a bride
C) the wealth of a bride immediately after marriage
D) a payment to the bride's family at the time of marriage
Question
Women who fetched the highest bridewealth payments among the Kipsigis were those

A) with the richest fathers.
B) with the poorest fathers.
C) who experienced menarche at a later age.
D) who experienced menarche at an earlier age.
Question
The Kipsigis are

A) polygynous pastoralists who require bridewealth payments upon marriage.
B) polyandrous pastoralists who require groomwealth payments upon marriage.
C) monogamous pastoralists who require both bridewealth and groomwealth payments upon marriage.
D) monogamous pastoralists who require only a bridewealth payment upon marriage.
Question
Menarche refers to

A) societies controlled by men.
B) societies where men essentially purchase wives by paying a bride price.
C) the time of a woman's first menstruation.
D) the time of a woman's first coitus.
Question
Freud argued that we each have a biological desire to mate with our parents but that cultural taboos stop us from doing so. Argue that Freud was wrong.
Question
Kipsigis bridewealth is associated with

A) polyandry.
B) competition over the most eligible women.
C) marriage decisions made by brides and grooms.
D) periods of food shortage.
Question
Bridewealth among the Kipsigis

A) is tendered in cattle.
B) compensates the bride's family for the cost of her move.
C) gives the groom rights to her labor and the children she bears during their marriage.
D) is higher for higher-status families.
Question
Generally, Buss's cross-cultural data show that

A) females value mutual love and attraction in a mate more than males do.
B) males and females differ in their mate preferences in ways predicted by evolutionary theory.
C) gender has a stronger influence on mate preference than culture.
D) chastity is a high-ranking trait for males and females.
Question
Which of the following is the best predictor of mate preferences?

A) sex
B) age
C) political views
D) culture
Question
Use a mathematical model to compare the probability of producing offspring who are homozygous for a lethal recessive when matings are inbred or outbred.
Question
In Buss's cross-cultural study, chastity was

A) an important mate quality in Sweden but not China.
B) an important mate quality in China but not Sweden.
C) important in both China and Sweden.
D) unimportant in both Sweden and China.
Question
Discuss how Buss's cross-cultural data have been used to test predictions from evolutionary theory. What might be some of the methodological problems associated with using surveys as a means of determining people's mate preferences?
Question
Describe the practice of a bridewealth payment with a focus on the case of the Kipsigis. What are the motivations for the bride's and groom's families? Give an example.
Question
Describe the differences between men and women regarding the preferred ages of prospective partners.
Question
Which aspects of Kipsigis bridewealth payments are consistent with evolutionary reasoning, and which are not?
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Deck 15: Evolution and Human Behavior
1
According to evolutionary psychologists, the environment of evolutionary adaptedness

A) is long gone.
B) has not yet arrived.
C) is here now.
D) never existed.
A
2
The expression of ________ traits is most sensitive to environmental conditions.

A) hormonal
B) behavioral
C) morphological
D) physiological
B
3
Evolutionary psychologists argue specifically that human brains are designed to solve problems involving

A) living things.
B) reciprocal altruism between people.
C) selective arguments.
D) science and technology.
B
4
It is generally agreed that complex adaptations

A) evolve slowly.
B) can evolve in short amounts of time.
C) do not evolve by natural selection.
D) arise in ways we cannot understand.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Opposition to the use of evolutionary theory is most intense when it is applied to

A) nonhuman primates.
B) early hominins.
C) the physiology of modern humans.
D) the behavior of modern humans.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The way genes are expressed-in the phenotype-is influenced by which of the following?

A) the genes of the parents
B) the local environment
C) the age of the organism
D) the culture
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Offspring of outbred matings have ________ offspring of inbred matings.

A) lower fitness than
B) the same fitness as
C) higher fitness than
D) more variable fitness than
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Phenotypic traits result from

A) learning.
B) genes.
C) an interaction of genes and environment.
D) the environment.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
An evolutionary approach to human behavior

A) implies that differences in behavior among humans are the product of genetic differences between individuals.
B) does not imply that differences in behavior among humans are the product of genetic differences between individuals.
C) is possible only because humans have a fossil record.
D) could not be done prior to the discovery of genetics and DNA.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The logic of evolutionary psychology is based on which of the following precepts?

A) Brains are made up of many special-purpose subcomponents adapted to solve specific real-life problems.
B) Brains are general-purpose machines adapted to solve many different problems.
C) Brains evolved through drift-like processes.
D) Brains of humans are capable of solving problems faced by all species of mammal.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Which of the following statements about flexible behavioral traits is true?

A) They cannot be shaped by natural selection because they are too sensitive to environmental conditions.
B) They can be shaped by natural selection because they are sensitive to environmental conditions.
C) They can be shaped by natural selection only if they are canalized.
D) They are not under natural selection; genetic drift determines behavioral traits.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The "nature-nurture question" proposes that

A) people vary simply because they have different genes and live in different environments.
B) there is a clear distinction between the effects of genes (nature) and the effects of the environment (nurture).
C) the expression of genes is dependent upon the local environment.
D) all of human behavior is determined by genes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Evolutionary psychologists believe the human mind evolved to solve the challenges that confront food foragers because

A) foraging is more time-consuming than agriculture.
B) humans have practiced foraging for most of our evolutionary history.
C) sexual division of labor is clearly evident in the fossil record.
D) foraging requires greater skill compared with agriculture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The logic of evolutionary psychology begins with the precept that

A) people are adapted to modern ways of life.
B) complex adaptations evolve quickly.
C) natural selection creates psychologies in animals in such a way as to solve specific adaptive problems.
D) humans evolved in stratified societies and high population density.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Behavioral traits are ________ morphological traits.

A) less genetic than
B) more canalized than
C) less canalized than
D) determined in the same manner as
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Which of the following statements is true?

A) Phenotypic traits result from either an individual's genes or from the impact of the environment, but not from both factors.
B) Kristaps is tall because his genes specified that he'd be tall.
C) The expression of any genotype depends on the environment.
D) Genes are like blueprints specifying an individual's phenotype.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Evolutionary psychologists believe that the human mind evolved to

A) deal with the pressures of living in densely populated urban areas.
B) allow humans to create increasingly more complicated technology.
C) solve the challenges of a foraging lifestyle.
D) avoid predators.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Which of the following statements correctly describes inbreeding?

A) It increases the chances of deleterious recessive alleles coming together in one individual.
B) It is bad because individuals with families have more defects than individuals without families.
C) It decreases the chances of deleterious recessives coming together in one individual.
D) It is good because it removes deleterious alleles from the population.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Which of the following statements is true?

A) Genes are like blueprints that specify phenotypes.
B) The expression of any genotype always depends on the environment.
C) There is a clear distinction between the effects of genes and the effects of the environment.
D) People vary only because their genes carry different specifications.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
One problem with the concept of the environment of evolutionary adaptedness is that

A) there is little fossil evidence from 240-40 ka.
B) some scientists believe that small-scale agricultural communities would make a better model.
C) our ancestors did not practice inbreeding avoidance.
D) modern hunter-gatherers are different from our ancestors in many ways.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Evolutionary theory predicts that human males should choose females who

A) are older than they are.
B) have high reproductive value.
C) have had many sexual partners.
D) are not symmetrical.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Humans rarely mate with close relatives because

A) culture stops us from doing what we really desire.
B) childhood propinquity stifles desire.
C) natural selection cannot stop the power of culture.
D) it is prohibited in most religions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
In Buss's cross-cultural survey, which of the following traits did males value more than females?

A) ambition and industriousness
B) good looks
C) virginity
D) sexual experience
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The advantage of outbreeding over inbreeding, and why inbreeding is avoided in humans and other primates, is that it

A) reduces the risk of the expression of deleterious alleles.
B) reduces the risk of heterozygosity.
C) increases the likelihood of the expression of deleterious alleles.
D) increases the likelihood of homozygosity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Which of the following statements is true?

A) There are no gender differences related to preferred age of mates and preferred number of partners.
B) Men tend to marry younger women, but this difference decreases as men age; in comparison, there is a greater age difference between women and their husbands.
C) Regarding new relationships, it seems that men tend to underestimate women's sexual interest, while women tend to overestimate men's interest in commitment.
D) Regarding new relationships, it seems that men tend to overestimate women's sexual interest, while women tend to underestimate men's interest in commitment.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
If you have one deleterious recessive allele that causes early death in its homozygous state, what is the probability that an offspring by you and your full sibling would acquire the lethal disease?

A) 1:1
B) 1:2
C) 1:4
D) 1:8
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Natural selection should favor behaviors that

A) reduce mating with relatives.
B) increase mating with relatives.
C) increase mating with siblings but not parents.
D) decrease the chances of outbred matings.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
In Buss's cross-cultural survey, which of the following traits did females value more than males?

A) ambition and industriousness
B) good looks
C) virginity
D) youth
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Taboos about who is an eligible marriage partner can be

A) examples of inbreeding avoidance mechanisms.
B) so important that they are genetically determined.
C) found in only a few cultures.
D) cultural constructs that rarely address the genetic requirement to avoid inbreeding.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Third-party attitudes toward incest arise when individuals extend their own aversion to incest to others in the society in which they live, viewing incest by others with disdain. What else is true of this phenomenon?

A) Individuals who grew up with only same-sex siblings have the greatest aversion to incest by other adults.
B) Individuals who grew up only with opposite-sex siblings have the greatest aversion to incest by other adults.
C) Third-party attitudes are genetically coded, so they vary little with the individual's particular history.
D) Third-party aversion is a discredited concept replaced by recent research in evolutionary psychology.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Nonhuman primates avoid close inbreeding by

A) not recognizing closely related individuals as members of the opposite sex.
B) the transfer of one sex at sexual maturity to distant groups.
C) coercion by other group members who alarm call if a mating attempt happens.
D) preventing the female from ovulating if a closely related male is in the vicinity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Evolutionary theory predicts that human females should choose males who

A) can provide the most resources.
B) are younger than they are.
C) have had many sexual partners.
D) are not symmetrical.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Among nonhuman primates, which of the following statements about inbreeding is true?

A) It is common.
B) It is rare.
C) It occurs when animals are bored.
D) It is avoided only with siblings.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Which of the following is evidence that psychological mechanisms reduce the chance of close inbreeding?

A) Taiwanese minor marriages
B) first-party attitudes toward incest
C) people who move to a kibbutz in their teens
D) domestic situations where the wife moves to the husband's group after marriage
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Generally, Buss's cross-cultural data show that

A) only females value traits in a mate that facilitate a long-term relationship.
B) males and females do not differ from each other in ways consistent with evolutionary theory.
C) males value female promiscuity more than females value male promiscuity.
D) cultural differences and gender differences both contribute to mate preferences.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
When a sister mates with her brother, there is a ________ chance that he will carry the same deleterious recessive gene that she does.

A) 50%
B) 25%
C) 100%
D) 75%
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Which of the following statements correctly describes incest prohibitions?

A) They exist in 50% of societies for brothers and sisters.
B) They do not exist for distant kin.
C) They conform to genetic categories.
D) They do not always conform to genetic categories.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
If the coefficient of relatedness between mates is 50%, and both are heterozygous for a deleterious recessive allele, Mendel's laws predict that ________ of their offspring will be homozygous recessive and die.

A) 25%
B) 50%
C) 75%
D) 100%
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Which of the following statements about Taiwanese minor marriages is true?

A) They produce about 80% fewer children than other arranged marriages.
B) They are much less likely to end in separation or divorce.
C) They rarely result in infidelity.
D) They were possible when parents had greater control over their children's actions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
In Buss's cross-cultural survey of mate preferences, he found that males and females cared most about

A) chastity.
B) good health.
C) mutual attraction and love.
D) good sex.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 64 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
A woman's ________ peaks in her twenties and then steadily declines until she reaches menopause, when it drops to zero.

A) fertility
B) sexuality
C) reproductive value
D) fecundity
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42
Discuss the evidence supporting incest avoidance in nonhuman primates. Please give examples.
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43
Although men typically prefer a larger number of sexual partners than women do, which of the following is true?

A) Men are less open to mating opportunities that do not involve long-term commitments.
B) This result is almost identical in all cultures.
C) In some cultures, men and women differed more greatly than in others.
D) Men prefer women who are older than they are.
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44
Why is evolutionary theory relevant to behavior even though behavior is sensitive to environmental conditions?
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45
Discuss the effect of arranged marriages between minors in Taiwanese societies and whether those unions are more or less successful than more modern-style unions.
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46
Kipsigis women who reach menarche early

A) have longer reproductive life spans.
B) have decreased fertility.
C) have lower offspring survivorship.
D) increase their chances of having pregnancies end in spontaneous abortions.
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47
According to research by David Buss, when individuals first meet someone to whom they are attracted, women are more likely than men to

A) be cautious about their partner's intentions.
B) make more false-positive errors.
C) overestimate men's commitment.
D) minimize the chance of missing sexual opportunities.
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48
Kipsigis men may assess the reproductive potential of prospective brides by

A) counting a woman's number of previous sexual partners.
B) calculating their age at menarche.
C) their weight.
D) their height.
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49
Bridewealth payment among the Kipsigis is dependent on the

A) wealth of the groom.
B) size of the groom's father's herd of cattle and goats.
C) age of menarche of the bride.
D) groom's father's wealth.
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50
What is bridewealth?

A) the monetary worth of a bride
B) the reproductive value of a bride
C) the wealth of a bride immediately after marriage
D) a payment to the bride's family at the time of marriage
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51
Women who fetched the highest bridewealth payments among the Kipsigis were those

A) with the richest fathers.
B) with the poorest fathers.
C) who experienced menarche at a later age.
D) who experienced menarche at an earlier age.
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52
The Kipsigis are

A) polygynous pastoralists who require bridewealth payments upon marriage.
B) polyandrous pastoralists who require groomwealth payments upon marriage.
C) monogamous pastoralists who require both bridewealth and groomwealth payments upon marriage.
D) monogamous pastoralists who require only a bridewealth payment upon marriage.
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53
Menarche refers to

A) societies controlled by men.
B) societies where men essentially purchase wives by paying a bride price.
C) the time of a woman's first menstruation.
D) the time of a woman's first coitus.
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54
Freud argued that we each have a biological desire to mate with our parents but that cultural taboos stop us from doing so. Argue that Freud was wrong.
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55
Kipsigis bridewealth is associated with

A) polyandry.
B) competition over the most eligible women.
C) marriage decisions made by brides and grooms.
D) periods of food shortage.
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56
Bridewealth among the Kipsigis

A) is tendered in cattle.
B) compensates the bride's family for the cost of her move.
C) gives the groom rights to her labor and the children she bears during their marriage.
D) is higher for higher-status families.
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57
Generally, Buss's cross-cultural data show that

A) females value mutual love and attraction in a mate more than males do.
B) males and females differ in their mate preferences in ways predicted by evolutionary theory.
C) gender has a stronger influence on mate preference than culture.
D) chastity is a high-ranking trait for males and females.
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58
Which of the following is the best predictor of mate preferences?

A) sex
B) age
C) political views
D) culture
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59
Use a mathematical model to compare the probability of producing offspring who are homozygous for a lethal recessive when matings are inbred or outbred.
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60
In Buss's cross-cultural study, chastity was

A) an important mate quality in Sweden but not China.
B) an important mate quality in China but not Sweden.
C) important in both China and Sweden.
D) unimportant in both Sweden and China.
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61
Discuss how Buss's cross-cultural data have been used to test predictions from evolutionary theory. What might be some of the methodological problems associated with using surveys as a means of determining people's mate preferences?
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62
Describe the practice of a bridewealth payment with a focus on the case of the Kipsigis. What are the motivations for the bride's and groom's families? Give an example.
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63
Describe the differences between men and women regarding the preferred ages of prospective partners.
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64
Which aspects of Kipsigis bridewealth payments are consistent with evolutionary reasoning, and which are not?
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