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Blatant Benevolence and Conspicuous Consumption: When Romantic Motives Elicit Strategic Costly Signals

TLDR
In this article, the authors examined the possibility that conspicuous displays of consumption and benevolence might serve as ''costly signals'' of desirable mate qualities, and found that romantic motives seem to produce highly strategic and sex-specific self-presentations best understood within a costly signaling framework.
Abstract
Conspicuous displays of consumption and benevolence might serve as \"costly signals\" of desirable mate qualities. If so, they should vary strategically with manipulations of mating-related motives. The authors examined this possibility in 4 experiments. Inducing mating goals in men increased their willingness to spend on conspicuous luxuries but not on basic necessities. In women, mating goals boosted public--but not private--helping. Although mating motivation did not generally inspire helping in men, it did induce more helpfulness in contexts in which they could display heroism or dominance. Conversely, although mating motivation did not lead women to conspicuously consume, it did lead women to spend more publicly on helpful causes. Overall, romantic motives seem to produce highly strategic and sex-specific self-presentations best understood within a costly signaling framework.

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The Influence of Mating Goal Activation and Gender Differences on the Evaluation of Advertisements Containing Sexual Words

TL;DR: This article examined the impact of humans' mating motivation on their attitudes toward and recall of advertising that contains words with sexual connotations (e.g., “Sexton Plumbing” and “We Sell...
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Signals sell: Designing a product line when consumers have social image concerns

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate how a monopolist optimally designs its product line when consumers differ both in their taste for quality and their desire for a positive social image, and show that average quality is lower than in a market without image concerns and there is underprovision as compared to the welfare-maximizing allocation.

Does Major Matter? Considering the Implications of Collecting Vignette Data from Our Students.

TL;DR: The authors compare responses to vignettes about procedural, interactional, and distributive justice from students in popular sociology and business classes and find that there is no significant difference in the way these two groups conceptualize justice.
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What Do Economically Costly Signals Signal?: a Life History Framework for Interpreting Conspicuous Consumption

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors read descriptions of two men purchasing automobiles with the same budget, one man purchased a new car for the sake of reliability (frugal investment); the other purchased a used car and allocated the remaining funds to conspicuous display features (new paint, larger wheels, louder sound system). Participants rated each character on life history characteristics, relationship interests, and relationship attractiveness.
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Inequity aversion in human adults: testing behavioural criteria from comparative cognition.

TL;DR: Results show that human behaviour satisfies two criteria imposed by the definition of inequity aversion, suggesting that the same or similar processes might influence economic decision-making in both humans and non-human animals.
References
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The Genetical Evolution of Social Behaviour. I

TL;DR: A genetical mathematical model is described which allows for interactions between relatives on one another's fitness and a quantity is found which incorporates the maximizing property of Darwinian fitness, named “inclusive fitness”.
Book

Handbook of social psychology

TL;DR: In this paper, Neuberg and Heine discuss the notion of belonging, acceptance, belonging, and belonging in the social world, and discuss the relationship between friendship, membership, status, power, and subordination.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Evolution of Reciprocal Altruism

TL;DR: In this paper, a model is presented to account for the natural selection of what is termed reciprocally altruistic behavior, and the model shows how selection can operate against the cheater (non-reciprocator) in the system.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Selfish Gene

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