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Sociosexuality, Commitment, and Sexual Desire for an Attractive Person

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Abstract

Sociosexuality refers to a personal predisposition to engage in uncommitted sex. Romantically involved individuals are more likely to engage in infidelity when more unrestricted in their sociosexuality and less committed to their current partners. However, commitment reliably predicts relationship maintenance and the activation of pro-relationship behaviors, regardless of sociosexuality levels. In two studies (Study 1: N = 566 heterosexuals; M age = 21.24, SD = 4.45; Study 2: N = 168 heterosexuals; M age = 23.28, SD = 5.60), the association between sociosexuality and commitment was examined. Replicating previous findings, men were more sociosexually unrestricted than women, and single individuals were more sociosexually unrestricted than their romantically involved counterparts (Study 1). Results also showed that more committed individuals were more restricted in their sociosexuality (Studies 1 and 2) and that commitment was negatively associated with physical and sexual attraction to an attractive person, regardless of sociosexuality levels (Study 2). Furthermore, commitment, but not sociosexuality, predicted sexual infidelity in the current relationship and this effect emerged even among sociosexually unrestricted individuals (Studies 1 and 2). No additional gender differences were found across studies. These results converge with findings suggesting that individuals shift their mating strategies and restrict their sociosexuality when in a romantic relationship and that commitment prevents relationship threatening behaviors such as sexual attraction or sexual infidelity.

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Notes

  1. Even though this component presents high reliability, increased reliability might still be achieved by removing SOI-R Item 1 “With how many different partners have you had sex within the past 12 months?” from this component (α = .84; women α = .83; men α = .85). By computing a new mean score for behavior without this item, a 2 (Gender) x 2 (Relationship status) ANOVA replicated the significant effect of gender, F(1, 525) = 4.62, MSE = 6.88, p = .032, \( \eta_{p}^{2} \) = .01, but more importantly demonstrates the expected effect of relationship status albeit marginal, F(1, 525) = 3.28, MSE = 4.89, p = .071, \( \eta_{p}^{2} \) = .01. Single participants reported more unrestricted behavior (M = 1.95, SD = 1.31) than those romantically involved (M = 1.77, SD = 1.15). This may be due to the fact that Item 1 asked participants to disclose their sexual activity within the last 12 months, whereas Items 2 and 3 asked for behavioral tendencies throughout their lives. This consideration might prove of importance to future research as the currently conveyed social norms regarding unrestricted sexual behavior may prevent individuals from disclosing their current behaviors (e.g., Fisher, 2009) and can possibly hinder the results obtained with this measure.

  2. As we found no significant gender differences in the association between commitment and sociosexuality (Study 1) or in the attraction to the attractive target (Study 2), gender was dropped from subsequent analyses.

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Acknowledgments

This research was funded by the grant SFRH/BPD/73528/2010, awarded by Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia to the first author. The authors would like to thank Aleksandra Huić and the anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments.

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Rodrigues, D., Lopes, D. Sociosexuality, Commitment, and Sexual Desire for an Attractive Person. Arch Sex Behav 46, 775–788 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-016-0814-3

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