dc.description.abstract | For our ancestors, social exclusion was a severe threat to their evolutionary goals, and,
consequently, we have evolved a wide range of coping strategies. Elevated motives to pursue
short-term sexual relationships presents one potential, yet relatively unexamined, strategy for
women following experiences of exclusion. The present research aimed to address this gap
by examining the influence of exclusion on women’s short-term mating (STM) motives, and
the role of perceived vulnerability to physical threats on this relationship. I predicted that
exclusion would lead unpartnered women, but not unpartnered men, to exhibit elevated STM
motives, and that heightened perceived vulnerability would mediate this relationship. Results
did not support these hypothesized relationships, but do suggest that exclusion may instead
lead to decreased STM motives among unpartnered women (Study 3). Additionally, while
not influenced by social exclusion, greater perceptions of vulnerability to physical threats
were related to greater STM motives. | en_US |