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Who's the Daddy? Infidelity Favours Father-Son Facial Dissimilarity (2109.10848v1)

Published 16 Aug 2021 in q-bio.PE

Abstract: Evolutionary theory predicts that children fare better if they resemble their father. However, if a man is promiscuous then his children tend to be (unwittingly) raised within other families; such children should fare better if they do not resemble their father. This suggests that father-son facial similarity should decrease as a function of male promiscuity. To test this hypothesis, the degree of similarity between each of 37 pairs of father-son photographs was rated by 83 participants. The promiscuity score of a father was defined as the number of sexual relationships he had been involved in. A linear regression of father-son similarity ratings against fathers' promiscuity scores indicated that the slope of the fitted line was significantly less than zero (slope=-0.176, p < 0.001), and that fathers' promiscuity scores account for 75% of the variance father-son facial similarity ratings. Additionally, a significant negative non-parametric correlation (Spearman's rho rho=-0.886, p=0.019) between father-son similarity ratings and fathers' promiscuity scores was found.

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