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Science 25 September 1998: Vol. 281. no. 5385, pp. 1999 - 2003 DOI: 10.1126/science.281.5385.1999
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Review
Sexual Selection, Receiver Biases, and the Evolution of Sex Differences
Michael J. Ryan
REVIEW
Recent approaches to analyzing the evolution of female mating
preferences emphasize how historical influences on female receiver systems can bias the evolution of male traits that females find attractive. These studies combine animal behavior, sensory biology, phylogenetics, and artificial neural network models. They attempt to
understand why specific phenotypes involved in sexual selection have
evolved, rather than merely determining whether such traits and
preferences are adaptive. It is now clear that traits and preferences
often do not coevolve via genetic correlations, that female mating
preferences for a given male trait are influenced by adaptations and
constraints outside of the context of female responses to that
particular trait, and that receiver biases can explain much of the
diversity in male signaling phenotypes. It also appears that an
understanding of historical effects will prove valuable in
investigating why neural and cognitive systems respond to sensory
stimuli as they do.
The author is in the Department of Zoology, University of Texas,
Austin, TX 78712, USA. E-mail: mryan{at}mail.utexas.edu
Read the Full Text
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