masterThesis
Estratégias sexuais e escolha de parceiros em pessoas transgêneras
Fecha
2019-03-25Registro en:
GOMES, Rodrigo de Menezes. Estratégias sexuais e escolha de parceiros em pessoas transgêneras. 2019. 99f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Psicobiologia) - Centro de Biociências, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2019.
Autor
Gomes, Rodrigo de Menezes
Resumen
Several researches on the intersexual differences of human sexual strategies and mate choice
criteria have been made over the last decades, resulting in empirical data supporting the theories
that have explained the evolution of human sexual and reproductive behavior, such as Sexual
Strategies Theory (SST), Strategic Pluralism Theory (SPT) and Biological Market Theory
(BMT). In general, these studies have focused on heterosexual individuals because hypotheses
and predictions from explanatory theories of sexual strategies focus on their consequences in
terms of reproductive success. Though many recent researches have also been performed with
samples of homosexual individuals, pointing largely towards sex-typical behavioral strategies
regardless of sexual orientation, the transgender phenomenon still remains relatively absent from
investigations on human sexual strategies. This study aimed to assess and compare indicative and
moderating variables related to sexual strategies and mate choice criteria in a sample of 120
individuals composed by 27 male-to-female (MtF) transgenders, 24 female-to-male (FtM)
transgenders, 37 female cisgenders (F) and 32 male cisgenders (M). It was investigated whether
either biological sex or gender self-perception was more influent on transgenders’ measures of
sociosexuality (SS), mate value self-assessment (MVS), self-esteem (SE) and preferred
characteristics for both short- and long-term mates. Statistical analysis of the obtained data
indicated that, for sexual strategies deemed as more advantageous from an evolutionary
standpoint (short-term for males and long-term for females), transgenders’ mate preference
criteria were concordant with their biological sex. For the less advantageous strategies (long-term
for males and short-term for females), however, the data pointed towards a likely influence of
gender self-perception on mate preference criteria. Transgenders’ MVS measures were also
congruent with their gender self-perception, whereas SS ones were mostly sex-typical. No
statistically significant differences were found for SE measures. In sum, the study’s findings
largely corroborated SST, SPT and BMT predictions, although both MtF and FtM transgenders
had mixed patterns for what literature has established as being typical of each sex regarding the
investigated variables.