Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Why Some People Don't Choose Equally Good Looking Mates?

IANS, 14 Jul, 2015 10:22 AM
    Partners who become romantically involved soon after meeting tend to be more similar in physical attractiveness than friends-first couples or partners who get together after knowing each other for a while, says a study.
     
    For example, the pairing of an unattractive woman with an attractive man is more likely to emerge if the partners had known one another for many months prior to dating.
     
    Partners who began dating within a month of first meeting each other showed a strong correlation for physical attractiveness, said the study published in the journal Psychological Science.
     
    "This study shows that we make different sorts of decisions about whom to marry depending upon whether we knew the person before we started dating," said co-author of the study Eli Finkel, professor of psychology at Northwestern University.
     
    "If we start dating soon after we meet, physical attractiveness appears to be a major factor in determining such decisions, and we end up with somebody who's about as attractive as we are," Finkel said.
     
    "If, in contrast, we know the person for a while before we start dating -- or if we are friends first -- physical attractiveness appears to be much less important, and we are less likely to be similar to our spouse on the dimension of looks," Finkel added.
     
    The researchers looked at data collected from 167 couples -- 67 dating and 100 married -- who were participating in a longitudinal study of romantic relationships.
     
    The couples had been together for as few as three months and as long as 53 years, with an average relationship length of eight years and eight months.
     
    The results revealed that the longer the romantic partners had known each other before dating, the less likely they were to be matched on attractiveness.
     
    But the correlation was much lower for partners who had known each other for a long time before dating. 
     
    A similar pattern emerged when the researchers looked at whether pairs were friends before they started dating; friends-first couples were less likely to be matched on attractiveness than couples who were strangers before dating.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Why Men Prefer Women With Sharp Curves

    Why Men Prefer Women With Sharp Curves
    Why do most men prefer women with curvier bodies, especially sharp curvy hips? According to a fascinating research, modern man's this preference has pre-historic evolutionary roots.

    Why Men Prefer Women With Sharp Curves

    Music Videos Affect Teenaged Kids' Sexual Behaviour

    Music Videos Affect Teenaged Kids' Sexual Behaviour
    Parents may consider music videos a harmless pastime for their teenaged kids but they may negatively impact their sexual behaviour as they objectify women and promote sexual activities involving men, says a study.

    Music Videos Affect Teenaged Kids' Sexual Behaviour

    Teenagers Not Aware Of Privacy Risks On Social Media

    Teenagers Not Aware Of Privacy Risks On Social Media
    Most teenagers upload personal information on the social media networks like Facebook without considering the risks involved, says a study.

    Teenagers Not Aware Of Privacy Risks On Social Media

    Laughter Best Tactic To Woo Your Girl

    Laughter Best Tactic To Woo Your Girl
      Sharing a few good giggles and chuckles makes people more willing to tell others something personal about themselves, without even necessarily being aware that they are doing so, finds a new study.

    Laughter Best Tactic To Woo Your Girl

    Wealth Behind Decline In Number Of Reproducing Males

    Wealth Behind Decline In Number Of Reproducing Males
    Researchers have discovered a dramatic decline in genetic diversity in male lineages four to eight thousand years ago -- likely the result of the accumulation of material wealth.

    Wealth Behind Decline In Number Of Reproducing Males

    Sleep Well To Enhance Sexual Pleasure

    Sleep Well To Enhance Sexual Pleasure
    David Kalmbach from the University of Michigan Medical School has found that each additional hour of sleep increased the likelihood of sexual activity with a partner by 14 percent. 

    Sleep Well To Enhance Sexual Pleasure