Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/188620
Title: A Double-Track Pathway to Fast Strategy in Humans and Its Personality Correlates
Author: Gutiérrez, Fernando
Peri, Josep M.
Baillès, Eva
Sureda Caldentey, Bàrbara
Gárriz, Miguel
Vall, Gemma
Cavero, Myriam
Mallorquí, Aida
Ruiz Rodríguez, José
Keywords: Psicologia del desenvolupament
Personalitat
Avaluació de la personalitat
Trastorns de la personalitat
Developmental psychology
Personality
Personality assessment
Personality disorders
Issue Date: 9-Jun-2022
Publisher: Frontiers Media
Abstract: The fast-slow paradigm of life history (LH) focuses on how individuals grow, mate, and reproduce at different paces. This paradigm can contribute substantially to the field of personality and individual differences provided that it is more strictly based on evolutionary biology than it has been so far. Our study tested the existence of a fast-slow continuum underlying indicators of reproductive effort¿offspring output, age at first reproduction, number, and stability of sexual partners¿in 1,043 outpatients with healthy to severely disordered personalities. Two axes emerged reflecting a double-track pathway to fast strategy, based on restricted and unrestricted sociosexual strategies. When rotated, the fast-slow and sociosexuality axes turned out to be independent. Contrary to expectations, neither somatic effort¿investment in status, material resources, social capital, and maintenance/survival¿was aligned with reproductive effort, nor a clear tradeoff between current and future reproduction was evident. Finally, we examined the association of LH axes with seven high-order personality pathology traits: negative emotionality, impulsivity, antagonism, persistence-compulsivity, subordination, and psychoticism. Persistent and disinhibited subjects appeared as fast-restricted and fast-unrestricted strategists, respectively, whereas asocial subjects were slow strategists. Associations of LH traits with each other and with personality are far more complex than usually assumed in evolutionary psychology.
Note: Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.889730
It is part of: Frontiers in Psychology, 2022, vol. 13, p. 889730
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/188620
Related resource: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.889730
ISSN: 1664-1078
Appears in Collections:Articles publicats en revistes (Psicologia Clínica i Psicobiologia)

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