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Oolon Colluphid
31 Mar 2009, 02:30 PM
Evolution and Human Behavior Volume 30, Issue 2, Pages 131-140 (March 2009)

Menstrual cycle shifts in attentional bias for courtship language

Rosen and López
The current study investigated whether women show an attentional bias toward courtship language during the fertile phase of their menstrual cycle.

Thirty heterosexual women (17 naturally cycling, 13 using hormonal contraceptives) completed a dichotic listening task on both a high and low fertility day of their menstrual cycle. Participants were asked to verbally repeat (shadow) an emotionally neutral target passage played in one ear while either a neutral or courtship distracter was played in the other ear.

Courtship distracters were flirtatious in content but not overtly sexual.

Shadowing errors were coded as a measure of attentional bias toward the distracter. Saliva samples were taken to determine whether levels of estradiol, progesterone and/or testosterone correlated with task performance.

As predicted, naturally cycling women made more shadowing errors when listening to a courtship distracter during the fertile phase of their cycle than during the nonfertile phase. This effect was moderated by relationship status, such that fertile, mated women showed an attentional bias for courtship language but fertile single women did not.

However, because of small sample sizes in the analysis, this relationship should be viewed as preliminary. Hormonal analysis revealed that higher levels of salivary estradiol predicted greater attentional bias toward courtship language in naturally cycling women. These results suggest that women's attention is drawn to verbal courtship signals when they are fertile, and that this shift is linked to increased estradiol release during the periovulatory phase.

DMB
31 Mar 2009, 03:40 PM
Sadly, so many women are on the pill these days and none of this applies. Anyway, I thought one of the main ways in which we have diverged from chimps is that there are no obvious physical signs of female fertility, so men are kept guessing anyway. ;)

Oolon Colluphid
31 Mar 2009, 03:53 PM
Sadly, so many women are on the pill these days and none of this applies.
Apparently it does: "13 [were] using hormonal contraceptives".

Berthold
31 Mar 2009, 04:23 PM
Sadly, so many women are on the pill these days and none of this applies.
Apparently it does: "13 [were] using hormonal contraceptives".
Just what is, then, a "high fertility day"? ;)

Brianna
31 Mar 2009, 05:00 PM
i could of told you that...

Berthold
31 Mar 2009, 05:57 PM
You mean, there are high fertility days when using a hormonal contraceptive?

Zebulon
31 Mar 2009, 06:57 PM
Maybe days that would ordinarily be high fertility days, if they weren't on the pill?

David B
31 Mar 2009, 09:17 PM
Sadly, so many women are on the pill these days and none of this applies. Anyway, I thought one of the main ways in which we have diverged from chimps is that there are no obvious physical signs of female fertility, so men are kept guessing anyway. ;)

Somewhere recently I read something suggesting that men can pick up subtle cues with reasonably effectively.

It was something to do with men being shown to find women more attractive when they were ovulating.

David

Cath B
31 Mar 2009, 11:07 PM
I'm thinking that for most of our history frequent pregnancies and prolonged breast feeding would have resulted in a far smaller proportion of women ovulating at any one time than nowadays.

Did men embark on hunting expeditions in the same spirit as their later counterparts took to cold showers as well as to impress what available women there were with their spear throwing skills?

Oolon Colluphid
01 Apr 2009, 08:26 AM
You mean, there are high fertility days when using a hormonal contraceptive?
Yeah, I've been wondering that. I guess I better get the full paper...

Berthold
01 Apr 2009, 03:33 PM
It was something to do with men being shown to find women more attractive when they were ovulating.

David
One research paper I heard about took as a parameter the tips given to terpsichorean ecdysiasts.

Cath B
02 Apr 2009, 08:26 AM
It was something to do with men being shown to find women more attractive when they were ovulating.

David
One research paper I heard about took as a parameter the tips given to terpsichorean ecdysiasts.

It took a google search and a few seconds sussing before I began to make sense of that one!

Berthold
02 Apr 2009, 04:07 PM
It took a google search and a few seconds sussing before I began to make sense of that one!
So you have never read the sequels of M*A*S*H? :)

Sodong
04 Apr 2009, 02:37 AM
Oolon: Yeah, I've been wondering that. I guess I better get the full paper... Maybe it depends on the type of drug. Some act to thin the endometrial lining and prevent implantation of the fertilized embryo rather than preventing ovulation or penetration of the sperm into the uterus. I don't know which type are used more commonly these days.

Zygote
04 Apr 2009, 03:28 AM
Hmmmm, the whole premise seems like a fairly obvious corollary to the theories about the times in the menstrual cycle when women are least receptive to, well, just about anything but chocolate.

Sodong
04 Apr 2009, 04:55 AM
Hmmmm, the whole premise seems like a fairly obvious corollary to the theories about the times in the menstrual cycle when women are least receptive to, well, just about anything but chocolate.Hah! Don't underestimate the attraction of chocolate. It's always sweet, available whenever you want it and it only leaves your fingers sticky :evil: