Does driving a Porsche make a man more desirable to women?

June 16, 2011 in Psychology & Psychiatry

New research by faculty at Rice University, the University of Texas-San Antonio (UTSA) and the University of Minnesota finds that men's conspicuous spending is driven by the desire to have uncommitted romantic flings. And, gentlemen, women can see right through it.

The series of studies, "Peacocks, Porsches and Thorstein Veblen: Conspicuous Consumption as a Sexual Signaling System," was conducted with nearly 1,000 test subjects and published recently in the .

"This research suggests that conspicuous products, such as Porsches, can serve the same function for some men that large and brilliant feathers serve for peacocks," said Jill Sundie, assistant professor of marketing at UTSA and lead author of the paper.

Just as peacocks flaunt their tails before potential mates, men may flaunt flashy products to charm potential dates. Notably, not all men favored this strategy – just those men who were interested in short-term sexual relationships with .

"The studies show that some men are like peacocks. They're the ones driving the bright colored sports car," said co-author Vladas Griskevicius, assistant professor of marketing at the University of Minnesota.

According to the researchers, women found a who chose to purchase a flashy luxury product (such as a Porsche) more desirable than the same man who purchased a non-luxury item (such as a Honda Civic). However, there was a catch: Although women found the flashy guys more desirable for a date, the man with the Porsche was not preferred as a marriage partner. Women inferred from a man's flashy spending that he was interested in uncommitted sex.

"When women considered him for a long-term relationship, owning the sports car held no advantage relative to owning an economy car," said co-author Daniel Beal, assistant professor of psychology at Rice. "People may feel that owning flashy things makes them more attractive as a relationship partner, but in truth, many men might be sending women the wrong message."

Though often associated with Western culture, extreme forms of conspicuous displays have been found in cultures across the globe and throughout history.

While finding that men may use conspicuous consumption as a short-term mating signal, the researchers discovered that women don't behave in the same manner and don't conspicuously spend to attract men.

"Obviously, women also spend plenty of money on expensive things," Sundie said. "But the anticipation of romance doesn't trigger flashy spending as it does with some men."

More information: To read the complete study, go to http://psycnet.apa … 0/4/664.html

Provided by Rice University search and more info website

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Physmet
Jun 16, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
Who doesn't love excitement? When a guy purchases something like a Porsche, it tells women that he probably isn't the boring sit around the house type (such as myself). So women who are looking around for fun, rather than marriage material, are going to spot that guy like a Gucci bag at half price!
JRDarby
Jun 16, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (3)
I think it's funny that there's no mention that this actually works to elicit short-term sexual relationships from many women!

Sexual attraction is in every way based on signals rather than direct characteristics. For instance, attractiveness is strongly correlated to facial symmetry in both men and women. Driving a high-dollar car like a Porsche is a signal to women that this man has resource to share with them (in exchange for sexual favors). Women are strongly hypergamous in general and some women, in short-term relationship contexts only, look first to money as a signal of what will push their buttons in bed.
orgon
Jun 16, 2011

Rank: 3 / 5 (5)
Obvious things are obvious. Coburn report: NSF wastes millions of dollars on wasteful projects. Apparently we just found another of them, while the cold fusion research has been delayed twenty years...

http://coburn.sen...5c01552a
jjoensuu
Jun 17, 2011

Rank: 1 / 5 (1)
They had to have a study on this? I think a large segment of male Porsche customers probably learned this long ago.

On another hand perhaps it is easy to get grant money for "research projects". I could invent a couple on my own, came to think about it.
jjoensuu
Jun 17, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
hmmm "orgon" that Coburn report is interesting. It states that:
Scientists Gone Wild at NSF. Investigative news reports found that some employees at NSF were spending more time viewing pornography than doing their jobs.
...
One senior executive spent at least 331 days looking at pornography on his government computer and chatting online with nude or partially clad womencosting the taxpayers between $13,800 and $58,000.[66] When caught, the NSF official retired but defended himself by suggesting he visited the porn sites to provide a living to poor overseas women. The senior executive explained "that these young women are from poor countries and need to make money to help their parents and this site helps them do that."[67]
Rank 2.8 /5 (6 votes)
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