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By John Tierney, New York Times, April 10, 2007
ABSTRACT.
In this meta-analysis of online dating and speed dating, we propose a corollary to the Flaw-O-Matic theory of romantic revulsion. Current research reveals that the Flaw-O-Matic, a mechanism in the brain that instantly finds fault with any potential mate, can be reoriented positively in certain conditions through a newly identified process, the Sally Field Effect.
When I first identified the Flaw-O-Matic, in a 1995 column, it seemed primarily a mechanism to kill romance. After studying picky daters - like a guy who couldn't tolerate dirty elbows, and a woman who insisted on men who were at least 5-foot-10 and played polo - I predicted that they would remain permanently single.
Today I'm more hopeful. Thanks to a revolution in dating research over the past decade, the Flaw-O-Matic now looks like a more versatile mechanism than we theoretical pioneers imagined.
My early work was done using personal ads, a crude tool (although state of the art in 1995). I found that people looking for love in New York magazine listed far more prerequisites (like polo skills) for a partner than did people advertising in other cities. Based on these numbers, and many dinners with friends who could never find anyone good enough, I concluded that the high percentage of single-person households in New York was due to New Yorkers' hyperactive Flaw-O-Matics.
This new theory of a neural mechanism did not immediately gain wide acceptance in the social-science literature. By my count, it has been cited a total of one time (in a psychotherapist's treatise on the “avoidant lover”). But the study of romantic revulsion has expanded because of the rise of online dating services and speed-dating events - gold mines of data.
Instead of asking people about their mate preferences, scientists can now watch mating rituals in real time. They've tracked who asks out whom - and who says yes - at online dating services by watching the customers' clicks and scanning their messages to look for telephone numbers and phrases like “let's meet.”
They've analyzed the courtship choices of more than 10,000 customers of a commercial speed-dating service. On campuses, they've even organized their own speed-dating events, at which you talk for several minutes apiece with perhaps a dozen people, sometimes two dozen. You discreetly mark on your scorecard which partners you'd like to see again, and the organizers match you afterward with any of them who reciprocated your interest.
Just as Darwin could have predicted, the researchers have found that women are pickier than men. While men concentrate mainly on looks and will ask out a lot of women as long as they're above a certain threshold of attractiveness, women focus on fewer prospects.
They're less willing to date someone of another race. When using online services, they pay more attention than men do to a potential partner's education, profession and income. They prefer taller men, but they're willing to relax their standards for the Ron Perelmans of the world, as revealed in a study of more than 20,000 online daters by Gunter Hitsch and Ali Hortacsu of the University of Chicago and Dan Ariely of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
They found that a 5-foot-8 man was just as successful in getting dates as a 6-footer if he made more money - precisely $146,000 a year more. For a 5-foot-2 man, the number was $277,000.
Online dating reveals the most exquisite calibrations of the Flaw-O-Matic because the daters fill out questionnaires listing more attributes than could ever fit in a personal ad. They can spend all day finding minute faults in hundreds of potential partners. But that's also why so many people never make a lasting match.
Continued Romantic Revulsion
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