Why do human and non-human species conceal mating? The cooperation maintenance hypothesis
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences • Vol/Iss. 287(1932) • The Royal Society • • Published In • Pages: ??•
By Ben Mocha, Yitzchak
Abstract
Note
Note that the author did not show any statistical analysis, just looked for percentages comparisons while reading the ethnographic record to support the hypotheses.
Sample Used | Coded Data | Comment |
---|---|---|
eHRAF World Cultures | Researcher's own | A sample of 249 cultures from 35 geographical regions, without considering the historical period. |
Standard Cross Cultural Sample (SCCS) | Researcher's own | 172 cultures in a combined SCCS/EA dataset to control within-culture variation and inter-culture independency. |
Ethnographic Atlas (EA) | Researcher's own | 172 cultures in a combined SCCS/EA dataset to control within-culture variation and inter-culture independency. |
Hypothesis | Supported |
---|---|
Humans will conceal legitimate mating from others in most human societies. | Supported |
There will be social norms that entitle humans to exert some control over their legitimate mating partner's extramarital relationships. | Support claimed |
Documents and Hypotheses Filed By: stefania.becerralavado