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The Cambridge Handbook of Evolutionary Perspectives on Sexual Psychology 4 Volume Hardback Set

The Cambridge Handbook of Evolutionary Perspectives on Sexual Psychology 4 Volume Hardback Set

The Cambridge Handbook of Evolutionary Perspectives on Sexual Psychology 4 Volume Hardback Set

Todd K. Shackelford, Oakland University, Michigan
October 2022
Available
Multiple copy pack
9781108939850
$477.00
USD
Multiple copy pack
4 Hardback books

    The interface of sexual behavior and evolutionary psychology is a rapidly growing domain, rich in psychological theories and data as well as controversies and applications. With nearly eighty chapters by leading researchers from around the world, and combining theoretical and empirical perspectives, The Cambridge Handbook of Evolutionary Perspectives on Sexual Psychology is the most comprehensive and up-to-date reference work in the field. Providing a broad yet in-depth overview of the various evolutionary principles that influence all types of sexual behaviors, the handbook takes an inclusive approach that draws on a number of disciplines and covers nonhuman and human psychology. It is an essential resource to both established researchers and students in psychology, biology, anthropology, medicine, and criminology, among other fields.

    • The most comprehensive handbook addressing evolution and sexual psychology, providing readers with the fullest treatment available on the relevant topics
    • Features contributions from leading researchers in the field
    • Its interdisciplinary approach will appeal to readers in psychology, biology, anthropology, medicine, and criminology among other fields

    Reviews & endorsements

    ‘This is a truly remarkable compendium of up-to-date theory and research on the wide range of topics studied by evolutionary biologists and psychologists, from foundational and mid-level evolutionary theories, to pre- and post-copulatory adaptations in males and females, and to sexual behavior in non-human primates and even Neanderthals.’ David Bjorklund, Professor of Psychology, Florida Atlantic University, USA, and author of How Children Invented Humanity

    ‘This Handbook on sexual psychology from an evolutionary perspective is a huge landmark in publishing. Its contributors are world-class scholars, and the editor is eminent in this field. It will be used by scholars, researchers, and readers interested in sexual psychology for many years to come.’ David M. Buss, author of The Evolution of Desire: Strategies of Human Mating and Evolutionary Psychology: The New Science of the Mind

    See more reviews

    Product details

    October 2022
    Multiple copy pack
    9781108939850
    3000 pages
    250 × 175 × 130 mm
    4.07kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. Foundations of Evolution:
    • 1. Natural selection
    • 2. Sexual selection
    • 3. Inclusive fitness theory
    • 4. Adaptive problems in the domain of human sexuality
    • 5. Adaptations, Byproducts, and Spandrels
    • 6. Evolved psychological mechanisms: Properties and Evidence, Misconceptions and Mismatches
    • Part II. Middle-level Theories:
    • 7. Parental investment theory
    • 8. Parent-offspring conflict
    • 9. Theory and evidence for reciprocal altruism
    • 10. Life history theory and mating strategies
    • 11.Sperm competition theory
    • 12.Sexual conflict theory
    • 13. Cross-species comparisons
    • 14. Cross-cultural methods in sexual psychology
    • 15. Behavioral genetics
    • 16. Sex differences and sex similarities
    • 17. Individual differences in sexual psychology
    • 18. Experimental methods in sexual psychology
    • Index.Part I. Pre-copulatory Adaptations:
    • 19. Sexual preferences
    • 20. Men's extra-pair sexual interest
    • 21. Male sexual attraction tactics
    • 22. Men's intrasexual competition
    • 23. Domains of female choice
    • 24. Sexual coercion and rape
    • 25.Mate poaching by men
    • Part II. Copulatory Adaptations:
    • 26. Sexual fantasy
    • 27. Ejaculation
    • 28. Copulatory thrusting in males
    • 29. Men's provisioning of oral sex
    • 30. Inducing female orgasm
    • 31. Copulatory urgency
    • Part III. 32. Post-ejaculatory adaptations to self-semen displacement
    • 33. Mate retention
    • 34. Shifts in partner attractiveness: Evolutionary and social factors
    • 35. Emotional commitment
    • 36. Sexual jealousy in males: The evolution of a specific mechanism for sexual Jealousy
    • 37.Men's attachment-related needs in the sexual arena
    • 38. Paternal care
    • 39. Paternal filicide
    • Index.Part I. Pre-copulatory Adaptations:
    • 40. Women's preferences: Pre-copulatory adaptations
    • 41. Female sexual attraction tactics
    • 42. Extrapair sexual interest
    • 43. Female intrasexual competition
    • 44. Female intersexual selection
    • 45. Evolution of precopulatory defense from rape and coercion in women
    • 46. Mate poaching
    • Part II. Copulatory adaptations:
    • 47. Sexual fantasies
    • 48. Copulatory thrusting
    • 49. Female provision of oral sex
    • 50.The adaptive value of women's orgasm
    • 51. Copulatory urgency: An evolutionary perspective of women's sexual desire
    • Part III. Post-copulatory adaptations:
    • 52. Mate retention
    • 53. Shifts in partner attractiveness
    • 54. Emotional commitment
    • 55. Sexual jealousy
    • 56. On attachment and evolution: Recounting the story of, and stories in, attachment theory
    • 57. Maternal filicide
    • Index.Part I. Controversies and unresolved issues:
    • 58. The female sexual orientation spectrum in evolutionary perspective
    • 59. The evolution of female same-sex attraction
    • 60. Male bisexuality
    • 61. Female bisexuality
    • 62. Masturbation in primates
    • Part II. Applications to health, law, and pornography
    • 63. Male reproductive health
    • 64. Women's menstrual cycles and ovulation provide balanced estradiol and progesterone for fertility and lifelong health
    • 65. Female genital cutting
    • 66. Costs of polygyny
    • 67. Male sexual disorders
    • 68. An evolutionary perspective on female sexual concerns and dysfunctions
    • 69. Evolutionary perspectives on male sexual offending
    • 70. Pornography and male sexual psychology
    • Part III. Non-human primate sexual behavior:
    • 71. Chimpanzee sexual behavior
    • 72. Bonobo sexual psychology
    • 73. Orangutan sexual behavior
    • 74. Gibbon evolved sexual psychology
    • 75. Sexual behavior in Marmosets in the context of cooperative breeding
    • 76. Capuchin sexual behavior
    • 77. Sexual behaviour in Neanderthals
    • Index.
      Contributors
    • Anna G. B. Sedlacek, Carey J Fitzgerald and Brittany Lorentz, Kelly Asao, Jaroslav Flegr, Samuel Pearson and William von Hippel, Farid Pazhoohi, Catherine A. Salmon and Jessica A. Hehman, Masanori Takano and Genki Ichinose, Aurelio José Figueredo and Mateo Peñaherrera-Aguirre, Tara DeLecce, Ulrika Candolin, Martha Escobar, Francisco Arcediano, Zebulon K. Bell, and Jordyn Truax, Marina L. Butovskaya, Severi Luoto and Michael A. Woodley, Jessica Engelbrecht and John Edlund, Aurelio José Figueredo and Catherine A. Salmon, Jody A. Thompson, Dan J Miller and Ryan C. Anderson, Adam C. Davis, Steven Arnocky, Megan Mackinnon and Larissa McKelvie, Mitchell Brown, Kaitlyn Boykin, Kelsey M. Drea, Alicia L. Macchione, Mary M. Medlin and Donald F. Sacco, Karlijn Massar, Gregory Gorelik, Andrew Holub and Gavin Vance, T. Joel Wade and Maryanne L. Fisher, Mariana A. Saramago and Ricardo Ventura Baúto, latency Rosa Angelica Lucio, Alonso Fernández-Guasti, and Maria Reyna Fuentes-Morales, Anders Ågmo and Gabriela Moralí, Gavin Vance, Arial Bloshinsky and Valerie Starratt, Gordon Gallup, Bruna S. Nascimento, Katia C Vione, and Renan P Monteiro, Rebecca Burch, Maryanne L. Fisher, James B. Moran, Catherine A. Salmon, T. Joel Wade, David Widman, Elizabeth G. Pillsworth, Tsukasa Kato; Moran Mizrahi, Ryan Schacht, Vibeke Ottesen, Donald Sacco, Kaitlyn Boykin, Alicia L. Macchione, Kelsey Drea, and Mary M. Medlin, Trond Viggo Grøntvedt, Mons Bendixen, and Leif Edward Ottesen Kennair, Marissa A. Harrison, Maryanne L. Fisher, Steven Arnocky, Adam Davis, and Michael Suszter, Domenic Roberto, Rachel James, and Melissa McDonald, Jasna Hudek-Knezevic, Igor Kardum, and Nermina Mehic, Rui Miguel Costa, Olivia Le Moëne, James B. Moran, Catherine A. Salmon, Rebecca L. Burch, Lisa L. M. Welling, Virginia E. Mitchell, Jenna Lunge, and Alex C. Orille, Courtney L. Crosby, Jitka Lindová, Juliana E. French, Sierra D. Peters, Olivia W. Breedin, Emma E. Altgelt, and Andrea L. Meltzer, Marissa A. Harrison, Jaroslava Varella Valentova, Marco Antonio Correa Varella, Andrea Lorena da Costa Stravogiannis, Ana Maria Fernandez, and Tamsin Saxton, William Dunlop and Majse Lind, Scott W. Semenyna, Paul Vasey, P. Lynne Honey, Menelaos Apostolou, Jaroslava Varella Valentova, Andreone Teles Medrado, Marco Antonio Correa Varella, Severi Luoto and Markus J. Rantala, Volker Sommer, Ruth Thomsen, Matilda Brindle, Peter B. Gray and Alex Straftis, Jerilynn C. Prior, Janet Howard, Rose McDermott, Klára Bártová and Kateřina Klapilová, Marianne Brandon and Jacqueline M. Di Santo, Tony Ward, Russil Durrant, and Harry Dent, Klára Bártová and Lucie Krejčová, Maria Botero, Zanna Clay, Liza Moscovice, and Thibaud Gruber, Carel P. van Schaik, Julia A. Kunz, and Maria A. van Noordwijk, Thad Q. Bartlett and Alexandra C. Sheldon, Jeffrey A. French and Aaryn C. Mustoe, Joseph H. Manson, Emma Nelson, Rebecca Wragg Sykes, Anna Maria Kubicka, and April Nowell

    • Editor
    • Todd K. Shackelford , Oakland University, Michigan

      Todd K. Shackelford is Distinguished Professor and Chair in the Department of Psychology and Director of the Center for Evolutionary Psychological Science at Oakland University in Michigan, USA.