When it comes to middle-aged men, they want younger women, often 'flaunt' their brainpower and high income, shows a new study
When it comes to middle-aged men, they want younger women, often 'flaunt' their brainpower and high income, shows a new study.u00a0
To reach the conclusion, researchers at Gothenburg University and Oxford University studied 400 lonely hearts ads to see how men and women choose partners.
u00a0
Research in the theory of evolution includes a number of accepted theories about how men and women choose their partners. Among the more established ones is that men place more emphasis on attractive appearance, whereas resources and social status are more important to women.
u00a0
By examining lonely hearts advertisements, the research team tested how valid these presumed preferences are when modern individuals choose partners.
u00a0
In the study, published in the journal Evolutionary Psychology, the researchers looked at 400 lonely hearts ads in the Swedish newspapers G teborgs-Posten and Aftonbladet and on the Websites Spraydate and match.com.
u00a0
To some extent, the study's findings support recognized notions, like - women, more than men, look for solid resources and social status. As a result men also offer this in their ads, through formulations like ''large house'' and ''economically independent.''
u00a0
Men in all categories prefer younger partners. Of a total of 97 men who mentioned age in their ads, only three were looking for an older partner -- among men aged 40 to 59, only one out of 67.
u00a0
Younger women, on the other hand, prefer older men: fully 14 of 16 women aged 20-39 were looking for an older partner. Among women over 60, however, the majority were looking for a younger man.
u00a0
Another point of departure for the study was that men are more fixated on appearance than women are. This turned out not to be the case.
u00a0
"When it comes to physical characteristics, it turned out that men and women were the same. Both used words like, ''athletic,'' ''beautiful,'' ''pretty,'' ''tall,'' ''handsome,'' and ''trim'' to the same extent, and this goes both for their descriptions of themselves and for the characteristics they were looking for in a partner," says J rgen Johnsson at the Department of Zoology, University of Gothenburg, one of the researchers behind the study.