In-Law and Mate Preferences in Chinese Society and the Role of Traditional Cultural Values
- PMID: 28901196
- PMCID: PMC10481029
- DOI: 10.1177/1474704917730518
In-Law and Mate Preferences in Chinese Society and the Role of Traditional Cultural Values
Abstract
Using 347 parent-child dyads as participants, this study directly examined in-law and mate preferences in a typical collectivist culture. The results showed (1) traits indicating social status and parental investment were more highly valued by the parents, while traits indicating genetic quality and traits related to romantic love were more highly valued by the children. (2) Parental preferences were moderated by gender of the in-laws. Good earning capacity was more preferred by parents in a son-in-law, traits connoting genetic quality and reproductive fitness were more preferred by parents in a daughter-in-law. (3) There was more convergence in in-law and mate preferences in Chinese culture than in Western cultures. (4) Traditional cultural values (i.e., filial piety) can be used as a predictor of traditional mate preferences and less parent-child divergences. Additionally, greater preference for kind and understanding by parents than by children as well as by daughters than by sons, and greater preference for social status by the daughters' than by the sons' parents have not been observed in the rating and the ranking instrument. These findings illustrated how culture handles the parent-child disagreement over mating by authorizing greater parental influence on children's mating decisions.
Keywords: cultural specific; cultural universal; evolutionary psychology; mate preference; parent–child divergence.
Conflict of interest statement
The author(s) declare no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and publication of this article.
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