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Wiley InterScience

Personal Relationships

Personal Relationships

Volume 14 Issue 4, Pages 623 - 632

Published Online: 21 Nov 2007

Copyright © 2009 IARR



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Do advertised preferences predict the behavior of speed daters?
ROBERT KURZBAN a JASON WEEDEN b
  a University of Pennsylvania and  bArizona State University
Correspondence to  Robert Kurzban, University of Pennsylvania, Department of Psychology, 3720 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104, e-mail: kurzban@psych.upenn.edu.

 Robert Kurzban, Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania;  Jason Weeden, Department of Psychology, Arizona State University.

Authors are listed alphabetically and contributed equally to the manuscript. We would like to thank HurryDate, Hurry Brands LLC, and especially Adele Testani for their generosity; without them this project would not have been possible.

Copyright 2007 IARR

Abstract

AbstractMethodResultsDiscussionReferences

Because researchers are making increasing use of data gleaned from Internet dating sites, it is important to know if the preferences people specify in Internet advertisements predict the choices that they actually make. HurryDate, a commercial speed-dating firm, collected data from over 10,000 people in their 20s, 30s, and 40s who participated in speed-dating events in cities across the United States. The present analysis compared these speed daters' advertised preferences with their decisions to attend particular events and their choices of potential partners at the events they attended. Findings indicated that speed daters' advertisements reflect frequently replicated sex differences and assortative patterns and that these advertised mate preferences predicted their decisions to attend particular events. Advertised preferences did not, in contrast, substantially predict decisions within events. These results support the conclusion that advertised preferences predict behavior in the mating domain in some contexts but not others.


Received: 11 September 2007; Accepted: 19 November 2007;
DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1475-6811.2007.00175.x About DOI

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