AUSTIN
— Men most often regret not having sex with more people while women
frequently regret having sex with the wrong partner, according to a
recently released study.
The study from
researchers at the University of Texas and University of California, Los
Angeles aimed to show that the feeling of regret is part of the
evolutionary process when it comes to reproduction, the University of
Texas said on Monday.
"For men throughout
evolutionary history, every missed opportunity to have sex with a new
partner is potentially a missed reproduce opportunity — a costly loss
from an evolutionary perspective," said Martie Haselton, a UCLA social
psychology professor who worked on the study.
The three main regrets
for men: being too timid to approach a possible partner, not being more
sexually adventurous when young and not being more sexually adventurous
in their single days.
The main regrets for
women include losing their virginity to the wrong partner, cheating on a
present or past partner and moving too fast sexually.
"The consequences of
casual sex were so much higher for women than for men, and this is
likely to have shaped emotional reactions to sexual liaisons even
today," Haselton said in a statement.
More women than men included "having sex with a physically unattractive partner" as a top regret.
The report was based on
three studies with a total of about 25,000 people and the findings were
published in the current issue of the Archives of Sexual Behavior, an
academic journal.
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