“What Do Evolutionary Researchers Believe about Human Psychology and Behavior?”, 2023 ():
We investigated the prevalence of beliefs in several key and contested aspects of human psychology and behavior in a broad sample of evolutionary-informed scholars (n = 581).
Nearly all participants believed that developmental environments substantially shape human adult psychology and behavior, that there are differences in human psychology and behavior based on sex differences from sexual selection, and that there are individual differences in human psychology and behavior resulting from different genotypes. About 3⁄4ths of participants believed that there are population differences from dissimilar ancestral ecologies/environments and within-person differences across the menstrual cycle. 3⁄5ths believed that the human mind consists of domain-specific, context-sensitive modules. About half of participants believed that behavioral and cognitive aspects of human life history vary along a unified fast-slow continuum. 2⁄5ths of participants believed that group-level selection has substantially contributed to human evolution.
Results: indicate that there are both shared core beliefs as well as phenomena that are accepted by varying proportions of scholars. Such patterns represent the views of contemporary scholars and the current state of the field. The degree of acceptance for some phenomena may change over time as evolutionary science advances through the accumulation of empirical evidence.
[Keywords: evolutionary psychology, beliefs, life history, group selection, menstrual cycle]