Saturday

Online dating vs. Conventional Dating


BLOOMINGTON – Valentine’s Day might bring on some feelings of the need to have a romantic partner.

As computers become cheaper, smaller and more powerful, and the Internet grows and grows, a new generation of dating websites have emerged.

Illinois State University social psychology professor Susan Sprecher is co-author of “Online Dating: A Critical Analysis from the Perspective of Psychological Science.” She said the urge to find someone on Valentine’s Day comes from the media.

“People are primed to think about it because of media coverage, because of cards in stores and so forth,” Sprecher said. “So I do think that people who aren’t in a relationship around Valentine’s Day think about it more, and think about, ‘Should I be?’ or ‘Should I try harder?’”

Dating sites provide some combination of access, communication and matchmaking all in one place. Sprecher said there are some differences in the beginning of a relationship from online dating compared to the conventional way.

“The differences really occur in the beginning, the process is different and in terms to back to Valentine’s Day,” Sprecher said. “If someone thought they wanted to be in a relationship, having access to online dating makes it efficient.”

According to the article Sprecher co-authored, the first generation began with Match.com launched in 1995.

Sprecher said some of these sites may be leading users to believe in the concept of one soul mate that doesn’t exist.

“That can be somewhat dysfunctional because then if things go wrong in the relationship and you thought they were your soul mate, then you may end it right away, because you think you need to find your true soul mate when in fact relationships need work and there probably isn’t such a thing as a true soul mate,” she said.

Sprecher said the biggest demographic for online dating is generally middle-aged adults.

“It’s people who end up in regions of the country, work certain types of work or have other constraints like they have children, they can’t go to single bars at night or something, that might lead certain people to be more likely to use it because this is a way to look for partners,” she said.

Sprecher said with the overall traffic on sites like these, it may be overwhelming for the individual going through all the profiles.

“That can lead to a sense of being overwhelmed and than can lead to bad choices because you start to not be sure on what you should emphasize on and narrowing the pool further.”

Sprecher also said that even though convenient, online dating does have some downsides.

“One downside that it leads to a shopping mentality and that you treat people as some degree of a commodity and you get treated to some degree as a commodity at least at first and again, I don’t think this occurs when you decide this is a person you want to date,” she said.

Amanda Pigott contributed to this story.


Online Dating Worked for These Two Math Teachers!


DESOTO, Kan. – A numbers guy, Winnetonka High School math teacher Kaleb Stoppel, is strict when it comes to planning.

“My parents and my brother were probably a little tired of me reminding them of what they needed to do,” Kaleb joked.

He’s been going through every detail of Valentine’s Day for the last month or so, and the big moment’s coming up. Kaleb’s starting to sweat a little bit.

The choir’s in place and so is his girlfriend, Allison Blanchard, a math teacher at Mill Valley High School.

He pops the question.

“You’re my one true love. You’re my best friend, and I’d be honored to spend the rest of my life with you. Would you marry me?” Stoppel asked, hopeful he already knew the answer.

“Yes I’ll marry you,” Allison said tearfully.

Given only a minute to adjust to the happy news,Blanchard said it’s about time!

“I’ve been giving him a little bit of a hard time about it, but no, I had no idea it was going to happen here or this way,” she said.

“I’m really shocked that you all are here. That part I snuck- I snuck in.”

The two have been together for five months, but they say that’s long enough.

“When you know, you know,” he said.

“Yes. No doubt in my mind about that. I love him more than anything,” she said.

Allison wasn’t always so sure. The two met on Match.com, and after he showed interest, Allison made Kaleb wait weeks to respond to his message.

“He’s a little younger than me, and I didn’t want a college frat boy,” she said.

After the third date Allison says she knew she wanted to marry Kaleb. The couple’s already set a date for sometime this summer. They say they’re about 90 percent finished with the plans.


Friday

Online Dating Makes And Breaks Relationships Study Finds


By Andrew Stern

(Reuters) - Half of American adults know someone who found love online, and while the Internet plays a more important role than before in starting relationships it is also a forum for cheating and lies that ends them, according to a survey released on Monday.

Released on the eve of Valentine’s Day, the survey of 1,000 people commissioned by marketing consultant Euro RSCG Worldwide found one in five said they have had a romantic or sexual relationship start online. Forty-nine percent knew someone whose relationship began that way.

Conversely, one-third of respondents surveyed earlier this month knew someone whose relationship ended because of online actions, and three-quarters believed strongly sexual communications conducted online outside of a relationship constituted cheating.

Online romance has evolved from the early days of flirting in a chat room or “cybersex” between strangers who had no intention of meeting in person.

“What people did online stayed online, for the most part,” Euro RSCG Chicago Group President Norm Yustin said. “Now our two worlds are blended, and the people we meet online and how we behave on social networks is affecting us at home and at work -- for good or bad.”

Deception is a constant online risk, and two university communications professors found in their research that 80 percent of the 78 profiles they sampled from matchmaking websites strayed from the truth to some extent.

The professors identified helpful clues as to who might be stretching, or shrinking, the truth about themselves: Liars tended to avoid the first-person pronoun “I” to distance themselves from their lies, they frequently employed negation such as “not boring” rather than “exciting,” and they kept their self-assessments brief.

“The less they write, the fewer untrue things they may have to remember and support later,” said Catalina Toma of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who teamed with Jeffrey Hancock of Cornell University.

Weight was lied about most often, with women off by an average of 8.5 pounds (3.9 kg) and men by 1.5 pounds (0.7 kg). Half fudged their height and one in five lied about their age.

“Someday there may be software to tell you how likely it is that the cute person whose profile you’re looking at is lying to you, or even that someone is being deceptive in an e-mail,” Toma said. “But that may take a while.”

(Editing by Daniel Trotta)


Thursday

In Modern Valentine Quest, Dating Is Digital


Love’s labor is not lost -- at least, not online.

Dating for most people is now officially a digital endeavor, according to a study out just in time for Valentine’s Day. Commissioned by the Association for Psychological Science (APS), the 64-page report analyzed 400 psychology studies and public interest surveys and concluded that most romantic connections today are made online, second only to meeting through friends.

That may not be so surprising given the vicissitudes of trying to meet people by hanging out in the local coffee shack with your laptop, decked out in your favorite hipster attire. And the work place is no place to find a date since it’s fraught with potential political and ethical snags nowadays: Do I work for her? Does she work for me? Oh, forget it.

By many accounts -- including a personal survey of friends -- the online dating scene is a vibrant social milieu that no longer carries the stigma it once did. Back in the 90’s many friends would chide with, “What’s the matter? Couldn’t you meet anyone in a bar?” That’s when less than 1 percent of people met partners through online or offline personals.

By 2005, about 37 percent of single Americans had set up dates online. Today, about 40 million Americans visit online dating sites each month, roughly one in three relationships start online, and over 120,000 marriages a year were spawned on the Web (according to Online Dating Magazine).

Indeed, several friends admitted to me that they met their (current) wives online, a fact I didn’t know until I started researching for this column. So maybe there’s still something of a stigma attached to online attachments.

While people may be hooking up online more often, it isn’t due to any scientific or magic algorithms. The ASP study dismisses all such claims by dating sites, noting that there’s no objective evidence that they can do a better job finding a match using special software. One friend confirmed this, noting that he found big sites like Match.com “like going to the mall.” Maybe you’ll find the right person in the crowd, but there are more misses than hits.

And while I’ve met people who seem happy with eHarmony, others who’ve tried it found it “icky.” Many people recommend finding a smaller site that’s tailored to your particular interests, such as Nerve.com, or one based on a local community group.

Digital dating can yield successful long-term romantic relationships, according to the study, because the sites offer access and communication. There are several other reasons for a growing comfort level with these sites, I believe. The first is that the rejection takes place in advance and anonymously. You don’t have to know how many people have checked you out, and then dismissed you (much better than enduring insults at the bar).

The second attraction of digital dating is that it’s flexible. Busy this week? Contact them next week. Not comfortable having a thousand men pore over your profile? Go to HerWay.com where all the female profiles are hidden. The women go through the men’s profiles and then decide who to contact. It avoids the problem some women have experienced of being “carpet bombed” by contacts from men. HerWay.com claims that it is at least five times more likely that online daters will successfully connect when a woman initiates contact. No kidding.

The third reason this scene works is that it’s work. Filling out all that personal information, favorite songs, the three famous people from history you’d invite to dinner, etc., takes time and effort. So it’s a self-selecting, goal-oriented group. Of course, the differences between men and women aren’t erased by going online.

According to the APS report, a study of 6,485 users of a major dating site found that men viewed three times more profiles than women did. That fact underscores one potential pitfall of online dating: It can turn into online shopping. The researchers warn that this can make people overly “judgmental” and picky. (So what if she likes Adele; go with it.) They also warn that too much digital dialogue can kill the buzz by generating unrealistic expectations before you meet: “He was so attentive online, but now he hardly calls.”

Naturally, if you’re not looking for a serious relationship and want to find someone right this minute, there’s an app for that. At least two seem to be picking up, er, steam. Skout has 7 million members and works by introducing “like minded” singles to one another based on proximity. There’s also SinglesAroundMe, a similar, international location-based mobile app. Others are Blendr and Grindr.

As for dating sites, no matter what you do, “You have to be honest,” advises one woman who found her boyfriend of two years online. “You have to know what you want. And you have to know what you’ll give up to get it,” she told me. She and others also noted that you can ask some tough questions right up front, something you’d be unlikely to do face to face.

So now that online dating has gone mainstream, there’s no excuse not to get out there.

Nasıl Daha Çekici olun


Monday

How to Snag a Wall Street Man


Close your eyes and think of your dream partner. What’s he or she like? Do they have a great sense of humor? Are they kind? Maybe cute in a way that’s a little awkward and nonthreatening? Do they seem like they’d be a good parent? Haha, JK, guys. Everyone knows that what every woman wants is a Wall Street Banker. It doesn’t matter if he’s rude, dumb or unattractive. When it comes to dating men in finance, always be closing (unless you’re talking about your legs, in which case keep those puppies open because what else will make him want to stick around). Luckily for you, professional matchmaker Samantha Daniels has written up the helpful guide How to Date a Wall Street Man.

Here are some of the best bits:

3. While a Wall Street man tends to like a little bit of a challenge when it comes to dating, he still likes things to be convenient and easy for him. A lot of women think that if they play hard to get, they will land a Wall Street man. This is NOT the case. Yes, you should be confident and avoid being a pushover but, at the same time, you shouldn’t be difficult. You need to be accommodating or his schedule and time constraints or he will get frustrated and find another woman.

Make sure to be available when he wants you to be. It doesn’t matter if you have plans with your friends or you’ve had a long day at work (LOL, women at work) and all you want to do is watch Breaking Bad in your pajamas. Too bad! A Wall Street Man’s time is money and your time is scientifically worthless.

7. Don’t get upset if your Wall Street guy isn’t as romantic as you would like him to be. Men, by nature are never as romantic as women want them to be, but Wall Street men especially are very business-like and think practically not romantically. If you want him to be more romantic, you are probably going to have to lead the way, and teach him what you want.

They will also never kiss you on the mouth. That’s reserved for “special people only.”

9. When it comes to getting you a gift, a lot of Wall Street men are all about extravagance over thoughtfulness. If you are a decadent woman, this will work well for you, but if you are a woman who prefers a man to be thoughtful over spending lavishly on something you don’t really want, you might be disappointed. This does not mean that a Wall Street man can’t be thoughtful, many are. However, a lot of Wall Street men are so busy making lots of money, that when they think to buy you something, they don’t care about the cost as long as it’s easy to get for you.

This is actually great since I replaced my pussy with an ATM slot years ago. It’s super convenient.

The best part of Daniel’s guide is that it proves that all men in finance are exactly the same— none of them have personalities or desires outside of their work— which makes it so much easier for us to choose, though don’t get too carried away. Whether or not you date (and subsequently get married so you can inherit his precious gold) is ultimately up to him. If you think that making your own money is an alternative, you are an undesirable uggo who will die alone.

Go get ’em, ladies!


Sunday

The Secret Science of Love at First Byte


By Amy Robach and Deborah Camiel

Online dating sites advertise groundbreaking technology and sophisticated formulas and state-of-the-art programming to help you find your true soul mate.

But does it work?

Though the technology found its own match with the rise of the Internet, the idea has been around for half a century. In 1965, a pair of University of Michigan undergrads found each other with the help of a primitive computer dating program.

Mina Jo Rosenbloom was in her junior year when she and Michael Linver, just admitted to medical school, became computer dating’s digital Adam and Eve. She didn’t have much faith that it would work. He came across a crazy ad for a dating service that used computers. Their mutual willingness to take a chance paid off.

Four and a half decades after they were hitched by an IBM mainframe, Michael and Mina Jo Linver are still married.

“That was the beginning of what turned out to be an incredible relationship for the rest of my life,” he said.

It was also the start of an industry designed to exploit a market: millions of singles eager – or desperate – to find a match. Punch cards and personal ads gave way to the first online dating sites, launched in the mid-90s. By 2001, industry revenues were just $40 million. Today, they’re approaching $2 billion.

With some 1,500 sites claiming they can match your personality type, your genes – even your facial structure - to potential mates, no company touts a “formula for success” as much as eHarmony, which owns 15 percent of the market.

The company says the goal is to help you find someone - like you.

Similarity is the thing that allows couples to understand each other better, said Gian Gonzaga, the company’s chief research scientist, who holds a Ph.D. in psychology from U.C. Berkeley. “We like to say that opposites attract and then later on they attack.”

Marriage-minded and straight-laced

At eHarmony, Gonzaga said he focuses on appealing to the marriage-minded and the straight-laced.

“We’ve always focused on long-term relationships,” he said. “That feels very unhip and very squarish. But really, when it comes down to it, our desire to find someone to connect with, to find a long-term relationship is a very deep part of our psyche.”

Long before the conversation turns to matrimony, finding your online match takes commitment. Subscribers fill out a compatibility survey with hundreds of questions and pay as much as $60 a month. The results, according to eHarmony’s claims, are striking.

“On average, 542 people a day got married after meeting on eHarmony,” said Gonzaga. “That’s about 5 percent of all of the newlyweds in the population. It’s almost 100,000 couples a year.”

Those numbers are hard to substantiate. But they do include Steve Caplette, who was overcome with emotion on the day he wed Sally Petruzello. For her part, it was love at first click.

“He was my first match,” she said. “You usually get seven people, and he was literally the first one that I opened up.”

Among other compatible traits, eHarmony found that Steve and Sally both tend to be more introverted, have strong anger management skills, and a sense of romance. eHarmony’s algorithm worked for Steve and Sally. But it’s not at all clear that kind of success is typical.

“I think it’s fair to say that we know a little, but we probably don’t know enough to have an algorithm that we think is really good,” said Dan Ariely, a professor of psychology and behavioral economics at Duke University. “If you look demographically it doesn’t look like they’re increasing the amount of marriages.

Ariely questions whether algorithms used by online dating sites actually work. His research was sparked by a profoundly personal understanding of the nature of human attraction. In his late teens, he was hospitalized for three years with a bad burn injury as he healed, he worried that his value in the dating market had plummeted.

“I knew my place in the social hierarchy before I got burned,” he said. “I knew which girls would date me in principle and which ones would not. And I started thinking about where do I fit in, where do I fit in now?

Ariely eventually fit in as an expert on human behavior. He studied thousands of online interactions, examining market value — what makes us attractive online. In men, the research shows, height and salary are key. Ariely said that a 5-foot, 9-inch tall man like himself would need to add another $40,000 a year to his annual income to hold the same attraction as another guy who stands 5’10".

Education also counts - for some online daters.

“More educated men are more desirable,” said Ariely. “For women, there’s no value for education. Women who are more educated don’t necessarily get any more attractive in online dating.”

For some singles, the idea of reducing romantic attraction to an algorithm may seem too simplistic. But Ariely says the problem is the simplistic way sites make us describe ourselves, using attributes that are easily searchable by computer but aren’t so useful in figuring out who we like or love.

“The (online) description is very skeleton-like,” he said. “We fill the gap in over-optimistic ways. And then you go and meet them for coffee, there’s a gap between what you built in your mind and between what they really are. And that gap causes tremendous disappointment.”

That doesn’t make for an auspicious start, especially since, according to Ariely, setting up each of those cups of coffee takes an average six hours of online drudgery.

’Tyranny of choice’

To solve the paralyzing problem of too many possibilities, which scientists call “the tyranny of choice,” online matchmaker eHarmony doesn’t let you browse its database. They let their computers do the searching and sorting for you.

“Imagine you walk into a stadium, and you see tens of thousands of people and you say, ’I wish I could go on a date tonight,” said Joseph Essas, eHarmony’s technology chief. “So you look at all those tens of thousands of people, what are you going to do? It’s overwhelming.”

Instead, eHarmony’s algorithm doles out just a few matches per customer per day. Then it’s your turn. Computers are not good with emotions and feelings, said Essas. But they’re very good at finding needles in a haystack.

And eHarmony claims to have a big haystack – but it’s not exactly clear just how big. At one point the company claimed some 40 million registered users. Some industry analysts say the pool of active users is more like 750,000.

A percentage of the daters who appear on eHarmony—and other dating sites—are not even paying subscribers, leading one critic to say that many users are, “flirting into the void.” Still, eHarmony is doing a number of things well, according to Dan Ariely.

“First of all, they have this million-question survey,” he said. “By doing that they basically kind of separate the serious people from the non-serious people. On top of that they create this belief in their algorithm. And they say, ‘look, we have some magic potion here.’ “

That may have a self-fulfilling effect on customers, but it hasn’t convinced Ariely that online dating companies are using hard science.

“The truth is, we’re very far away, in the science part, from understanding how this works,” he said.

For some, the proof is in the pudding. After forty-four years of marriage, three children, and six grandchildren, Michael and Mina Jo Linver are still grateful for that mainframe with a heart.

“The rest is the magic, the mystic kind of elements that attract people to each other,” said Michael. “And that’s something that I don’t think any computer can really do. It just either happens or it doesn’t.