As a platform for meeting people, online dating has been growing in popularity. As the dating sites were growing, there wasn't a lot of easily available data on the people who used them to draw many conclusions from a sociological standpoint, but now that the numbers of people who use these sites is in the tens of millions, that is changing. When looking at the balance between choosing traits that make for a good relationship match verses eliminating people based upon negative attributes, aka "deal breakers", it appears people predominately employ the latter strategy.
A group of sociologists from the University of Michigan led by Elizabeth Bruch obtained data from one of the large dating sites and they looked at a randomly-selected group of people from New York City to determine what factors in their decision-making process led them to select or eliminate potential mates.
Bruch and her team divided the rules into two broad categories, "deal breakers" and "deal makers," used to exclude or include people for the next level of contact. Bruch wondered: Is mate selection like a job interview process, where the person with the best combination of positive factors wins? Or is it more like a Survivor-style reality show, where contestants are picked off one by one for a single failing?
Among the deal breakers are:
(Score: 5, Insightful) by In hydraulis on Tuesday September 06 2016, @06:13AM
People don't know what they want.
They sure as hell know what they don't want.
(Score: 2) by Snotnose on Tuesday September 06 2016, @03:03PM
I know I don't want to be around a smoker.....
When the dust settled America realized it was saved by a porn star.
(Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Tuesday September 06 2016, @04:19PM
Me either. I'm getting the sense from the article that the researchers have some fanciful idea that people shouldn't have "deal breakers" and should "look at the whole package" or somesuch nonsense. It's really quite simple: if I'm going to commit my time and resources and enter a serious relationship with someone that's supposed to lead to living together and possibly having kids, I don't want to waste my time with someone who has a trait I cannot live with. Smoking is definitely one of those. Not being attractive enough (such as being obese) is another. Relationships like this are about finding someone you can live with long-term, and it's the deal-breakers that make that impossible.
(Score: 2, Insightful) by Francis on Tuesday September 06 2016, @05:18PM
I've noticed that. I'll be just about exactly what a women claims to want and then get some lame excuse for not getting a second date.
Usually because of chemistry. There's a special section I hell for people that obsessed with chemistry. Chemistry it's something that develops over time.
The deal breakers tend to come up earlier because it's easier to share them. Why waste my time or hers if there's an obvious deal breaker? It's a lot easier too identify them than the more positive qualities.
(Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Wednesday September 07 2016, @04:22PM
Yeah, I have the exact same problem with women. I'm tall, look much younger than I am (and try to date women my own age usually, to 5 years less, I'm not chasing women 15 years younger), have a good job, don't smoke, am in excellent shape, don't have stupid pictures of bathroom selfies or a headless torso on my profile, am educated, and I'm tall (need to say it again because women seem to love it). Doesn't matter. AFAICT, women want all that, but also a guy who's extremely outgoing and gregarious and supremely confident. I'm an engineer; those qualities do not really go along with this profession. So I always fail the "chemistry" test; as you say, that develops over time, but I don't get a second chance because women are all looking for George Clooney's look and personality on the first date. It's little wonder to me why I meet so many ~40yo women who are single and never married. A mail-order bride is sounding more and more attractive, except that I really want a woman I have a lot in common with, and I doubt I'd find that with someone who barely even speaks my language. I dated a girl for a while back in college from an eastern culture and it didn't work out; the cultural differences and family issues were a real problem. Though I do have to say it does seem Asian women are more interested in men like me: thin, not bearded, no tattoos, and an engineer. These four qualities seem to be giant turn-offs for American women.