DOI: 10.1177/02654075261465751 ISSN: 0265-4075

When Ballet Fails to Inspire Attraction: Trait Signals Override Occupational Cues in Mate Preferences

Bedirhan Gültepe, Ahmet Yasin Şenyurt, Elvan Kiremitçi Caniöz

Mate preferences are shaped by multiple social cues, including occupational information and perceived personality traits. However, little is known about how these signals interact, particularly when occupations carry strong artistic and cultural meanings. The present research examined how representations of ballet dancers interact with personality trait cues to influence romantic desirability. Across four within-subjects experiments, participants evaluated hypothetical profiles that varied by occupation (ballet dancer vs. accountant) and by one experimentally manipulated trait: intellectuality (Study 1), compatibility (Study 2), talent (Study 3), or sex-typed characteristics (masculinity/femininity; Study 4). Results generally showed that personality traits exert more influence on romantic evaluations than occupational labels. High intellectuality and compatibility substantially increased attractiveness, particularly in long-term contexts, regardless of occupation. Talent yielded modest increases in desirability across relationship contexts. Manipulations of masculinity and femininity produced mixed effects: high masculinity enhanced evaluations of accountants but did not offset perceptions of ballet dancers. Importantly, ballet dancers were not systematically devalued and were often rated as equally desirable to accountants when paired with favorable trait descriptions. Overall, the findings suggest that individual trait signals tend to override occupational stereotypes in mate preferences, although conflicts between sex norms and occupational cues may attenuate the positive effects of desirable traits.

More from our Archive