Abstract
AbstractCollective dances are considered to serve as a strategic tool to convey information about the internal stability and collective action capabilities of performing coalitions. This communicative function not only aids in ally recruitment but also facilitates decision-making to manage conflicts within coalitions. While previous empirical studies mainly focused on mechanical aspects like dance simultaneity, the influential role of dancers' sex, a crucial coalitional component, is often overlooked. Considering that sex is detected very quickly and automatically by others, ignoring dancers’ sex may make the ecological validity of previous findings questionable. Moreover, no research currently examines how dancers’ sex influences the coalition quality assessments made by passive observers. To address this gap, the present study investigates potential differences in coalition quality ratings between dances performed solely by males and females. Drawing from the evolutionary perspective on male participation in coalitional dynamics, particularly the outgroup male target hypothesis, we propose that male dancers would be perceived as having higher coalition quality than female dancers, and dancers’ sex effect would exceed the effect of movement simultaneity type. The results confirm our hypothesis, highlighting that it is dancers' sex, rather than movement simultaneity type, that plays a primary role in coalition evaluations. Implications are discussed through the lens of error management theory, the outgroup male target hypothesis, and the recognition of sex as a dominant social cue.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
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