科學(xué)研究發(fā)現(xiàn),我們總是容易信任與我們相像的人。與此同時(shí),與我們相像的人對(duì)于我們而言,卻更不會(huì)引起我們的性欲。
Would you buy a used car from this man? The answer depends on whether he looks like you, researchers believe.
We are more likely to trust people who look like us, psychologists told the British Science Festival yesterday - even though we find them less attractive.
Researchers tested how willing players of a game were to entrust money to strangers whose faces they could see on a computer screen. They found that players were more trusting when those faces had been digitally manipulated to resemble their own.
"Normally they trusted people about 50 per cent of the time. But when the faces were changed to look like them, they trusted 73 per cent of the time," said Lisa DeBruine of the University of Aberdeen, who conducted the research.
She said she believed that the response had an evolutionary basis, as we subconsciously assume those who look like us must be relatives. But because we are programmed to avoid finding close relatives sexually attractive, this means those we trust are not necessarily the ones we find attractive. Dr DeBruine's team found that even when looking at members of the opposite sex, subjects found those who looked like them trustworthy - but they did not want to sleep with them.
"When the players were judging the faces for physical attractiveness they thought similar faces less attractive," she said. "So we believe resemblance is trustworthy - but not lustworthy."
These two conflicting evolutionary drives highlight a tension in choosing reproductive partners, Dr DeBruine said. For although we avoid pairing up with siblings, we must not choose partners too genetically distant.
Dr DeBruine said this was a real problem for other animals, some of whom risked accidentally mating with the wrong species. Even in humans, she said, there is evidence that we breed better with people who have some genetic similarity.
"A study in Iceland showed that partners who are third or fourth cousins have more surviving grandchildren than people who are either more closely related or less closely related," she said. "People choose partners that are kind of intermediate."
Anthony Little, a research fellow at the University of Stirling, said this may help to explain why we are prone to pick partners who look a bit like our parents."People select partners similar to their opposite sex parent," he said. "The best predictor of someone's partner's hair and eye colour is the hair and eye colour of their opposite sex parent."
你會(huì)從一個(gè)人手里買(mǎi)下他的二手車(chē)嗎?研究顯示,它取決于這個(gè)人是否長(zhǎng)得像你。
心理學(xué)家在英國(guó)科學(xué)節(jié)(British Science Festival)上說(shuō),對(duì)于跟我們長(zhǎng)得像的人,我們總是更容易信賴(lài),即使他們的魅力值并不高。
研究者做了一個(gè)游戲,測(cè)試參與者是否愿意將金錢(qián)委托給一個(gè)陌生人。這些人的臉都會(huì)在電腦的大屏幕上出現(xiàn)。研究者發(fā)現(xiàn),當(dāng)那些臉被電腦處理成與參與者的臉相似時(shí),他們的信任度就會(huì)更高。
"一般來(lái)說(shuō),50%的情況下他們會(huì)相信他人。但當(dāng)這些臉被處理過(guò),看起來(lái)像他們時(shí),信任度就會(huì)提高到73%."發(fā)起研究的阿伯丁大學(xué)( the University of Aberdeen)的麗莎·德布琳(Lisa DeBruine)說(shuō)。
她認(rèn)為這種種反應(yīng)是有進(jìn)化論基礎(chǔ)的,在潛意識(shí)里,我們總認(rèn)為那些與我們相似的人一定與我們有血緣關(guān)系。同時(shí),由于我們已經(jīng)形成了避免在近親身上發(fā)現(xiàn)性吸引力 的定律,因此,我們所信賴(lài)的人未必就是我們覺(jué)得有魅力的人。德布琳博士的團(tuán)隊(duì)發(fā)現(xiàn),即使是面對(duì)異性成員,參與者也認(rèn)為與他們相似的人更可信,--但他們并不想和對(duì)方上床。
"當(dāng)參與者通過(guò)臉來(lái)判定身體的吸引力時(shí),他們便會(huì)認(rèn)為相似的面孔的吸引力不高。因此我們認(rèn)為相像更可靠,--但卻不吸引人。"德布琳博士說(shuō)。
她認(rèn)為,這兩種相沖突的進(jìn)化進(jìn)一步加劇了選擇配偶時(shí)的壓力。雖然我們盡力避免近親結(jié)婚,但我們也不會(huì)選擇與我們基因相差太遠(yuǎn)的人。
而這在其它的動(dòng)物里也是一個(gè)無(wú)法回避的問(wèn)題,有一些動(dòng)物有時(shí)會(huì)冒險(xiǎn)與另一個(gè)物種發(fā)生交配。即使在人類(lèi)社會(huì)中,也有證據(jù)表明基因相似的人在哺育后代上做得更好。
"冰島的一個(gè)研究表明,如果是第三或第四代的表親結(jié)為夫婦,他們孫輩的存活率比近親結(jié)婚或者是基因相差很遠(yuǎn)的夫婦的都要高。因此人們傾向于折中的做法。"
斯特林大學(xué)(University of Stirling)的研究成員安東尼 里特(Anthony Little)認(rèn)為這也許有助于解釋為什么我們總是傾向于選擇與我們父母相似的人為配偶。"在擇偶時(shí),人們會(huì)選擇與他們性別相對(duì)的父母相似的人。想要知道一個(gè)人配偶的頭發(fā)或者眼睛的顔色,看看與他們性別相對(duì)的父母吧。"