A Worldwide Test of the Predictive Validity of Ideal Partner Preference Matching
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American Psychological Association (APA)
Abstract
Ideal partner preferences (i.e., ratings of the desirability of attributes like attractiveness or intelligence) are
the source of numerous foundational findings in the interdisciplinary literature on human mating. Recently,
research on the predictive validity of ideal partner preference matching (i.e., Do people positively evaluate
partners who match vs. mismatch their ideals?) has become mired in several problems. First, articles exhibit
discrepant analytic and reporting practices. Second, different findings emerge across laboratories
worldwide, perhaps because they sample different relationship contexts and/or populations. This registered
report—partnered with the Psychological Science Accelerator—uses a highly powered design (N = 10,358)
across 43 countries and 22 languages to estimate preference-matching effect sizes. The most rigorous tests
revealed significant preference-matching effects in the whole sample and for partnered and single
participants separately. The “corrected pattern metric” that collapses across 35 traits revealed a zero-order
effect of β = .19 and an effect of β = .11 when included alongside a normative preference-matching metric.
Specific traits in the “level metric” (interaction) tests revealed very small (average β = .04) effects. Effect
sizes were similar for partneredparticipants whoreported ideals before enteringa relationship,and there was
no consistent evidence that individual differences moderated any effects. Comparisons between stated and
revealed preferences shed light on gender differences and similarities: For attractiveness, men’s and
(especially) women’s stated preferences underestimated revealed preferences (i.e., they thought
attractiveness was less important than it actually was). For earning potential, men’s stated preferences
underestimated—and women’s stated preferences overestimated—revealed preferences. Implications for
the literature on human mating are discussed.
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Eastwick, P. W., Sparks, J., Finkel, E. J., Meza, E. M., Adamkovič, M., Adu, P., Ai, T., Akintola, A. A., Al-Shawaf, L., Apriliawati, D., Arriaga, P., Aubert-Teillaud, B., Baník, G., Barzykowski, K., Batres, C., Baucom, K. J., Beaulieu, E. Z., Behnke, M., Butcher, N., ... (2025). A worldwide test of the predictive validity of ideal partner preference matching. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 128(1), 123-146. [Link: doi https://doi.apa.org/doi/10.1037/pspp0000524]