
October 24th, 2012
05:10 PM ET
Study looks at voting and hormones
While   the campaigns eagerly pursue female voters, there's something that may   raise the chances for both presidential candidates that's totally out of   their control: women's ovulation cycles.
You read that right.   New research suggests that hormones may influence female voting choices   differently, depending on whether a woman is single or in a committed   relationship.
Please continue reading with caution. Although the   study will be published in the peer-reviewed journal Psychological   Science, several political scientists who read the study have expressed   skepticism about its conclusions.
A bit of background: Women are   more likely to vote than men, other studies have found. Current data   suggest married women favor Gov. Mitt Romney, in a 19% difference, over   President Barack Obama, while Obama commands the votes of single women   by a 33% margin, according to the study. And previous studies have shown   that political and religious attitudes may be influenced by   reproductive goals.
In the new study's first experiment, Kristina   Durante of the University of Texas, San Antonio and colleagues   conducted an internet survey of 275 women who were not taking hormonal   contraception and had regular menstrual cycles. About 55% were in   committed relationships, including marriage.
They found that   women at their most fertile times of the month were less likely to be   religious if they were single, and more likely to be religious if they   were in committed relationships.
Now for the even more   controversial part: 502 women, also with regular periods and not taking   hormonal contraception, were surveyed on voting preferences and a   variety of political issues.
The researchers found that during   the fertile time of the month, when levels of the hormone estrogen are   high, single women appeared more likely to vote for Obama and committed   women appeared more likely to vote for Romney, by a margin of at least   20%, Durante said. This seems to be the driver behind the researchers'   overall observation that single women were inclined toward Obama and   committed women leaned toward Romney.
Here's how Durante explains   this: When women are ovulating, they "feel sexier," and therefore lean   more toward liberal attitudes on abortion and marriage equality. Married   women have the same hormones firing, but tend to take the opposite   viewpoint on these issues, she says.
"I think they're   overcompensating for the increase of the hormones motivating them to   have sex with other men," she said. It's a way of convincing themselves   that they're not the type to give in to such sexual urges, she said.
Durante's   previous research found that women's ovulation cycles also influence   their shopping habits, buying sexier clothes during their most fertile   phase.
"We still have the ovulatory hormones that have the same   impact on female brains as across other species," she said. We want sex   and we want it with the best mate we can get. "But there are some high   costs that come with it," she said, particularly for women who are   already in committed relationships.
This isn't the first time   hormones have been looked at in connection to voting. Last year Israeli   researchers published a study in the journal European   Neuropsychopharmacology examined the stress hormone cortisol in voters   in Israel. Levels of this hormone were higher in people right before   they were about to vote than in the same people when they were not   voting.
Durante's study on women noted that liberal attitudes   favor social equality and tend to be less associated with organized   religion. Conservatism is more about traditional values and is linked to   greater participation in organized religion.
The most   controversial part of the study is not only that hormonal cycles are   linked to women's preferences for candidates and voting behaviors, but   also that single women who are ovulating are more likely to be socially   liberal, and relationship-committed women are more likely to be socially   conservative, said Paul Kellstedt, associate professor of political   science at Texas A&M University.
One of the major caveats this paper fails to address is that men also have biochemical changes, Kellstedt said.
"The   reader may be left with the impression that women are unstable and   moody in ways that extend to their political preferences, but that men   are comparative Rocks of Gibraltar," Kellstedt said in an e-mail.
Kellstedt   does not study biology, but he has been involved in research suggesting   that men's political preferences are even more volatile than women's.
"There   is absolutely no reason to expect that women's hormones affect how they   vote any more than there is a reason to suggest that variations in   testosterone levels are responsible for variations in the debate   performances of Obama and Romney," said Susan Carroll, professor of   political science and women's and gender studies at Rutgers University,   in an e-mail.
Carroll sees the research as following in the   tradition of the "long and troubling history of using women's hormones   as an excuse to exclude them from politics and other societal   opportunities."
"It was long thought that a woman shouldn't be   president of the U.S. because, God forbid, an international crisis might   happen during her period!" Carroll said.
A better explanation   for the divide in voting preferences between single and married women is   the difference in economic status, she said.
One expert gave it a   little more credence: Israel Waismel-Manor, a political scientist at   the University of Haifa in Israel, who did the cortisol study last year.
He's   not sure that this hormonal effect Durante found among women isn't   real, but offered an alternate explanation too: Research has shown women   prefer more "manly men" when they are in their most fertile phases of   the cycle. Obama and Romney are both handsome, in good physical shape   and could fit the type of "provider of the family," so either could fit   the ideal, depending on a woman's preference.
Assuming there is   some hormonal explanation, the effects could cancel themselves out,   since different women will be on different cycles when they vote, and   the candidates have a similar level of physical attractiveness,   Waismel-Manor said. A more elaborate research design is needed to   examine it further.
"Even if the finding is correct, there's a chance that it won't have a cumulative effect on the electorate," he said.
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Post by: Elizabeth Landau - CNN.com Health Writer/Producer	
Filed under: 2012 Election • Mental Health