Scientific Blackpill: Difference between revisions

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* ''More desirable mates cause women to experience more orgasms.''
* ''More desirable mates cause women to experience more orgasms.''
* ''There may be assortative mating of desirable men with women susceptible to be highly orgasmic.''
* ''There may be assortative mating of desirable men with women susceptible to be highly orgasmic.''
* '' The association in the CHFLS data between partner wealth and self-reported orgasm frequency is best explained by the fact that women with higher-income partners are healthier, happier, younger, and more educated than women with lower-income partners.''
* ''The association in the CHFLS data between partner wealth and self-reported orgasm frequency is best explained by the fact that women with higher-income partners are healthier, happier, younger, and more educated than women with lower-income partners.''


<span style="font-size:125%">'''References:'''</span>
<span style="font-size:125%">'''References:'''</span>
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* Herberich E, Hothorn T, Nettle D, & Pollet TV. 2010. ''A re-evaluation of the statistical model in Pollet and Nettle 2009''. Evolution and Human Behavior. 31(2): 150-151. [[https://www.researchgate.net/publication/247233758_A_re-evaluation_of_the_statistical_model_in_Pollet_and_Nettle_2009 Abstract]]
* Herberich E, Hothorn T, Nettle D, & Pollet TV. 2010. ''A re-evaluation of the statistical model in Pollet and Nettle 2009''. Evolution and Human Behavior. 31(2): 150-151. [[https://www.researchgate.net/publication/247233758_A_re-evaluation_of_the_statistical_model_in_Pollet_and_Nettle_2009 Abstract]]
*  Pollet TV, Nettle D. 2010. ''Correction to Pollet and Nettle (2009): “Partner wealth predicts self-reported orgasm frequency in a sample of Chinese women''. Evolution and Human Behavior. 31(2):149. [[https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2010-03654-009 Abstract]]
*  Pollet TV, Nettle D. 2010. ''Correction to Pollet and Nettle (2009): “Partner wealth predicts self-reported orgasm frequency in a sample of Chinese women''. Evolution and Human Behavior. 31(2):149. [[https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2010-03654-009 Abstract]]
=== Most women fake orgasms and moan loudly without having orgasms ===
Muehlenhard (2010) reviewed survey results on the prevalence of women faking their orgasms and found that between 53% and 68% of the women studied admitted to have pretended orgasms at least once. These surveys used a variety of different methods, from questionnaires distributed via mail by women's magazines to samples of college students in a variety of Western countries.
Similarly, a study by Brewer (2010) found that as many as 80% of women state to moan without having an orgasm.
Women's orgasms, as well as those of closely related great apes, are also considerably louder, more complex and begin earlier in the copulatory sequence when compared to males (Hamilton, 1978).
<span style="font-size:125%">'''Discussion:'''</span>
Despite the absence of univocal evidence for women more likely orgasm with wealthier partner, it remains a promising hypothesis that women pretend to have orgasms in order to please their partner and [[resources for orgasms|provoke their investment and bonding]] due to women's resource dependence on men. Women not having more likely orgasms with wealthy men could be explained by a [[wikipedia:hedonic adaptation|hedonic adaptation]] without falsifying the hypothesis of pretense of orgasms as a resource-extractive strategy. This adaptation complex in both men and women can be thought of as piggybacking upon former adaptations for men's [[promiscuity|promiscuous]] adaptations allowing women to trick men into investment by feigning sexual willingness or sexual neediness, with the resulting [[simp]]ing behavior then also becoming adaptive in men as it increases their parental investment which is conductive to [[reproductive success]] in [[life history|K-selecting]] ecologies.
As part of a synthesis of female sexual behavior among great apes (Hominidae) closely related to humans, Mogielnicki (2020) hypothesized that hominid female copulartory vocalizations may raise the social status of the copulating males, and also raise the vigilance of the males the female has chosen to defend her from unwanted males, which is thought to occur in a somewhat promiscuous mating context that may even have involved sperm competition. A large variety of other hypotheses on female copulatory vocalizations have been suggested as summarized in the [[female orgasm]] article.
<span style="font-size:125%">'''References:'''</span>
* Muehlenhard, C. L., & Shippee, S. K. (2010). Men’s and Women’s Reports of Pretending Orgasm. Journal of Sex Research, 47(6), 552–567. doi:10.1080/00224490903171794
* Brewer, G., & Hendrie, C. A. (2010). Evidence to Suggest that Copulatory Vocalizations in Women Are Not a Reflexive Consequence of Orgasm. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 40(3), 559–564. doi:10.1007/s10508-010-9632-1
* Hamilton, W., & Arrowood, P. (1978). Copulatory vocalizations of chacma baboons (Papio ursinus), gibbons (Hylobates hoolock), and humans. Science, 200(4348), 1405–1409. doi:10.1126/science.663622
* Mogielnicki C, Pearl K. 2020. ''Hominid sexual nature.'' [[https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12064-020-00312-8 Article]]


===<span style="font-family:'Linux Libertine, Georgia, Times, serif'; font-size: 24px; line-height: 1.2; font-weight: normal;" id="Men_with_much_lower_incomes_than_their_wives_are_more_than_twice_as_likely_to_not_have_sex">Men with much lower incomes than their wives are more than twice as likely to not have sex</span>===
===<span style="font-family:'Linux Libertine, Georgia, Times, serif'; font-size: 24px; line-height: 1.2; font-weight: normal;" id="Men_with_much_lower_incomes_than_their_wives_are_more_than_twice_as_likely_to_not_have_sex">Men with much lower incomes than their wives are more than twice as likely to not have sex</span>===
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