Looking for Love in all the Web Places - What happens when Cupid's arrow goes online...22% of heterosexual couples had met online, 61% for same-sex couples..What Do You Really Know About Online Dating?



With Valentine's Day upon us, there are some interesting conclusions to note from soon-to-be-published research regarding that most 21st Century of romantic developments: the dating website. In this past weekend's New York Times Sunday Review, psychologists Eli Finkel and Benjamin Karney provide a preview of their article to appear in this month's issue of Psychological Science in the Public Interest. The title of the Times column tells their story succinctly: "The Dubious Science of Online Dating."
Finkel and Karney aren't suggesting that anything is wrong with dating online. In fact, data indicate that online dating activity is at an all time high and has shed much of the stigma that used to be associated with it. As of 2009, they report, 22% of heterosexual couples had met online, a number that jumps to a whopping 61% for same-sex couples.

But what the researchers do take issue with is the notion that dating websites successfully use compatibility analyses, matching algorithms, and other mathematical formulae to predict attraction and, ultimately, relationship satisfaction. While successful relationships can and do flourish among those who meet online, they suggest that there's no evidence to indicate that these websites are able to predict compatibility with anywhere near the reliability often touted (and paid for by users).
In short, it's not that online dating is a bad way to meet potential partners, but it appears to be no better than more traditional venues that make no claims regarding scientific rigor, like meeting at a bar or being set up by friends. Simply put, dating websites aren't all they're cracked up to be.

Why is the science behind these website algorithms suspect? There are multiple explanations, including people's inability to accurately self-assess when it comes to the characteristics they desire in a mate and the fact that many of the best predictors of relationship satisfaction (e.g., communication style, sexual compatibility) can't be diagnosed until people have actually gotten to know each other. But yet one more reason for the limitations of dating website algorithms is that–stop me, regular readers of this blog, if you've heard this one before they typically fail to account for one of the most important influences on human nature: CONTEXT.

As Finkel and Karney write: "dating sites don't take into account the environmentsurrounding the relationship." And they go on to cite various external forces that have been found to be important predictors of how relationships go external considerations like job status, financial stress, infertility, and physical health. But before you even get to pondering how environment and context impact a relationship, you also have to consider the ways in which these factors shape attraction to begin with. And that's not something we tend to do naturally.

As an example, I recently asked one of my undergraduate classes the following question: what attracts you to someone? Specifically, I asked them to list the first 3 factors that came to mind when thinking about their own feelings of attraction.
All told, 50% of responses stuck to physical characteristics. Another 47% of responses focused on personality traits: "sense of humor" was the most popular, followed closely by "intelligent" and "warm."

Just 3% of answers had anything to do with context. Such as whether they had recently ended another relationship. Or how much their friends like the prospective mate. But contextual considerations like these do matter when it comes to attraction. As do seemingly prosaic factors like geographical proximity, familiarity, and reciprocity (i.e., once you learn someone else has a thing for you, it makes you feel more drawn to that person too).

This isn't the picture of attraction and love painted by the supposedly scientific dating website, however. The very idea that mathematical equations can spit out the profile of your perfect partner grows out of the assumption that with love, as with much of life, the key to understanding human nature is finding the right combination of personality characteristics. But people are more complicated than that we're greater than the sum of our apparent traits.

PSYCHOLOGY TODAY Feb 13, 2012


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What Do You Really Know About Online Dating?

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P.S. Ako ne znate engleski dobro, pitajte Vegu da Vam prevede tekst, ukratko kompjuteri još
uvijek ne mogu izračunati točno buduću kompatibilnost partnera, ali činjenica je da se 22%
heterosexualnih i 61% istospolnih parova u SAD našlo on line, ali samo 3% ispitanika promatra situaciju
u širem kontekstu, a 97% u pojednostavljenom, pa valjda kasnije u vezi otkrivaju "širi kontekst" veze..:)))

30.04.2017. u 18:21   |   Editirano: 30.04.2017. u 18:45   |   Dodaj komentar

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