The Cognitive Psychology of Pick-up Lines, Psychology Today

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The Hardest Word

Every relationship embarks with that very first step. Some people never get past that very first step. Very first impressions matter, and our opening few lines can either energize the interaction, or cause the other person to look around for the nearest exit. Gratefully, psychologists have spent years of celibacy attempting to understand the psychology behind pick-up lines for your own benefit.

In the ’80s, Chris Kleinke and colleagues analyzed the effectiveness of one hundred pick-up lines across a number of different settings, including bars, supermarkets, restaurants, laundromats, and beaches. They found three main categories of openers: direct gambits, which are fair and get right to the point (e.g, "I’m sort of timid, but I’d like to get to know you"), innocuous gambits, which hide a person’s true intentions ("e.g., "What do you think of this band?"), and adorable/flippant gambits, which involve humor, but often in a cheesy, canned way (e.g., "Do you have any raisins? No? Well then, how about a date?".)*

Both boys and women agreed that nice/flippant pick-up lines were the least attractive. Women, however, preferred innocuous lines and had a greater aversion to nice/flippant lines than boys, while guys had a greater preference for direct opening gambits than women. This basic pattern has been found over and over again in a multiplicity of settings, including singles bars. What’s going on?

Trait perception plays a crucial role. We don’t have direct access to a person’s characteristics, so we infer underlying traits from overt behaviors. One probe found that people perceive those who use innocuous lines as smarter and sexier than those who use lovely/flippant lines. Another probe found that while women perceived guys who use bimbo pick-up lines as more sociable, certain, and funny, they also perceived them as less trustworthy and intelligent. While all these traits are certainly valued in a mate, research shows that low trustworthiness and low intelligence are deal breakers for a long-term relationship, overriding other "luxuries", such as humor and confidence.

Women are rightfully skeptical of adorable/flippant pick-up lines: research shows that those with a long-term mating strategy tend to use supportive and fair pick-up strategies, whereas those with a short-term strategy tend to use manipulation and dishonesty. I should note that when a woman is looking for a short-term fling, it may be an entirely different story: one examine conducted on college students found that women were willing to have a short-term fling with guys they were attracted to, regardless of the content of his pick-up lines! More stable individual differences also play a role, with extraverts and those with a general orientation toward hook-ups vs. long-term committed relationships, more receptive to humor and sexually charged pick-up lines.

While all these findings are informative, they don’t address moment-to-moment mental fluctuations. We’re not machines, with a constant supply of cognitive resources on directive. Receptivity to pick-up lines involves cognitive processing, which requires thought. A certain amount of mental energy is required to go after the conversation and cut through the bullhonkey to figure out a person’s true intentions. But your mental state at any given moment is influenced by a number of factors, including how much stress you’ve experienced that day, or even just before the current conversation. If you’ve already been hit by a barrage of lovely/flippant lines, your brain may feel a bit fatigued.

But how does this relate to receptivity to pick-up lines? Does a person’s mental state affect how a pick-up line is perceived? In a latest probe, Gary Lewandowski and colleagues gave ninety nine undergraduates a five-minute writing task in which they were asked to describe a latest journey. In the "ego-depletion" condition, students were told they couldn’t use the letters A or N anywhere in the story, whereas in the "non-depletion" condition, they weren’t given this cognitively taxing instruction. After the writing task, participants looked at a picture of an attractive opposite lovemaking person and rated how they would react if the person approached them, using one of three categories of openers: direct, innocuous, and lovely/flippant. What did they find?

Those whose brains were cognitively taxed were less receptive to adorable/flippant openers compared to those in the non-depletion condition. In the context of nice/flippant pick-up lines, those in the depleted group were more likely to "ask the initiator to leave them alone" and "disregard the initiator." In contrast, for innocuous gambits, the depleted students were less likely to overlook the person and ask the person to leave them alone. Receptivity to direct gambits was unaffected by being cognitively depleted. There were also gender effects consistent with the prior research I mentioned earlier. Guys were more receptive to direct openers, and females were more receptive to innocuous openers. Also, women were least receptive to lovely/flippant openers.

What explains these effects? The researchers argue that when it comes to nice/flippant openers, less mental effort is required to figure out the persons’ intentions. Mix that in with the fact that a depleted, frazzled individual may have less tolerance for visible pick-up attempts, and you have an enhanced aversion to cheesy lines. When it comes to innocuous pick-up lines, however, the person’s intentions are much more ambiguous. This requires much more cognitive resources to decipher intent, sometimes too much. As the researchers note, it’s less socially awkward for the brain depleted individual to proceed the conversation until the person’s intentions become more visible.

There are visible implications here. Pick-up lines are uttered in bars and clubs all across the globe, to people who very likely aren’t using their utter cognitive resources. I think it’s fair to say that if you want to accurately perceive a person’s intentions, don’t go overboard with the alcohol, or come in a pick-up-line-rich environment when you’ve had a cognitively taxing day. And what about the other side of the coin? Well, if you have difficulty talking with people without using corny jokes riddled with blatant sexual intent, you may want to work on toning it down or work on being more witty and contextually adequate* — or else you may just make an excellent pick-up line researcher!

For more on how the mind and mating are inextricably linked, be sure to check out the upcoming book Mating Intelligence Let out: The Role of the Mind in Hook-up, Dating and Love (Oxford University Press), co-authored by Glenn Geher and me, with a Foreword by Helen Fisher. The book is due out January, 2013, but you can pre-order it here!

* Note that there’s a difference inbetween adorable/flippant lines that are canned, and witty humor that is contextually suitable. Research shows that genuinely clever uses of humor and wit can in fact be exceptionally sexy as an indicator of intelligence and creativity (see this examine and here for a review).

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