The content and structure of reputation domains across human societies: a view from the evolutionary social sciences
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B • Vol/Iss. 376(1838) • Royal Society • London • Published In • Pages: 1-10 •
By Garfield, Zachary H., Schacht, Ryan, Post, Emily R., Ingram, Dominique, Uehling, Dominique, Macfarlan, Shane J.
Hypothesis
Different reputation domains are emphasized for men and women.
Note
Gender was deemed to be a predictor of reputation domain evidence when the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC), an estimator of how well data fits a model, was less than -2. Evidence for all domains was male-biased with the following exceptions: sociosexuality, parental care and teaching did not demonstrate gender biases and sexual fidelity was female-biased.
Test Name | Support | Significance | Coefficient | Tail |
---|---|---|---|---|
Generalized linear mixed-effects model | Supported | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN |