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Adolescent intelligence and socio-economic wealth independently predict adult marital and reproductive behavior
Authors:Charlie L. Reeve  Jordan E. LyerlyHannah Peach
Affiliation:Health Psychology Program, University of North Carolina Charlotte, United States
Abstract:Counter-intuitively, sociobiological and evolutionary theories predict a negative relationship between g and reproduction when applied to modern humans. Although existing research has documented this dysgenic trend, the association between g and socio-economic factors presents a confound that has not systematically been addressed in prior research. Based on a sample of 325,252 individuals drawn from the nationally representative Project Talent database, we examined the unique effects of g and socio-economic wealth, assessed in adolescence, on marital and reproductive behavior over the next 11 years. Results show that both g and socio-economic wealth have unique, independent negative effects on marital and reproductive behavior such that individuals of higher intelligence and higher wealth delay marriage and reproductive longer than those of lower intelligence and wealth. The effect of g was slightly stronger than that of wealth, though for both variables much of their influence was mediated by educational attainment. Consistent with sociobiological theory, these dysgenic effects were stronger among females than males.
Keywords:Evolutionary theory   Intelligence   Socio-economic wealth   Reproductive behavior   Cognitive epidemiology
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