A study of mobile
phone calls suggests that women call their spouse more than any other person. That changes as their daughters become old
enough to have children, after which they become the most important person in
their lives. The study has been published in the journal Scientific Reports. It also shows that men call their spouse
most often for the first seven years of their relationship. They then shift
their focus to other friends. The results come from an analysis of the texts of
mobile phone calls of three million people. According to the study's co-author,
Professor Robin Dunbar of Oxford University, UK, the investigation shows that
pair-bonding is much more important to women than men. "It's the first
really strong evidence that romantic relationships are driven by women,"
he told BBC News. But the data shows that women start to switch the preference
of their best friend from about the mid-30s, and by the age of 45 a woman of a
generation younger becomes the "new best friend", according to
Professor Dunbar. "What seems to happen is that women push the 'old man'
out to become their second best friend, and he gets called much less often and
all her attention is focussed on her daughters just at the point at which you
are likely to see grandchildren arriving," he says. Prof Dunbar also
claims that the findings suggest that human societies are moving away from a
patriarchy back to a matriarchy. The aim of the project was to find out how
close, intimate relationships vary over a lifetime. This kind of
anthropological study is normally very difficult to do because it is hard for
researchers to get such a big picture of people's lives. But by looking at an
at an extremely large mobile phone database, they were able to track these
changes extremely accurately. They had access to the age and sex of the
callers, who between them made three billion calls and half a billion texts
over a period of seven months.
Intensely focussed
The team wanted to
find out how the gender preference of best friends, as defined by the frequency
of the calling, changed over the course of a lifetime and differed between men
and women. They found that men tend to choose a woman the same age as
themselves - which the researchers presumed to be their girlfriend or wife - as
a best friend much later in life than women do, and for a much shorter time.
This occurs when they are in their early-30s, possibly during courtship, and
stops after seven years or so. Women, however, choose a man of a similar age to
be their best friend from the age of 20. He remains for about 15 years, after
which time he's replaced by a daughter. The researchers say that a woman's
social world is intensely focussed on one individual and will shift as a result
of reproductive interests from being the mate to children and grandchildren. According
to Prof Dunbar, the data suggests that "at root the important
relationships are those between women and not those between men". "Men's
relationships are too casual. They often function at a high level in a
political sense, of course; but at the end of the day, the structure of society
is driven by women, which is exactly what we see in primates," he
explains. Many anthropologists argue that most human societies are patriarchal
on the basis that in most communities men stay where they are born whereas the
wives move. But Professor Dunbar and his colleagues are arguing that this only
occurs in agriculturally based societies. "If you look at hunter-gatherers
and you look at modern humans in modern post-industrial societies, we are much
more matriarchal. It's almost as if the pendulum between the two sexes,
power-wise, is swinging (back) as we move away from agriculture toward a knowledge-based
economy," he says.
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