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Internet Dating More Successful than Thought(onlinedatingmagazine.com -
February 24, 2005) Internet dating is proving a much
more successful way to find long-term romance and friendship
for thousands of people than was previously thought,
new research shows.
A new study of online dating site members has found
that when couples who had built up a significant relationship
by e-mailing or chatting online met for the first time,
94 per cent went on to see each other again.
Perhaps
surprisingly, the study, by Dr Jeff Gavin, of the
University of Bath, also found that men were more
emotionally dependent on their ‘e-partners’ than
women, and more committed to the relationship.
Old-fashioned
romance isn’t dead, however: among
the survey’s findings were that exchanging gifts
was the best way to ensure commitment in the relationship.
Dr
Gavin’s
research comes at a time when the numbers using internet
dating agencies have steadily increased: around six
million Britons are now believed to have signed up.
Dr
Gavin, with Dr Adrian Scott of the University of
Bath and Dr Jill Duffield of the University of the
West of England, carried out an online survey of
229 people, aged 18 to 65, who have used UK internet
dating sites, asking them about their main relationship
that they had had online. Dr Gavin’s paper
will be presented to a conference next month.
The research showed that:
• 94 per cent of those surveyed saw their ‘e-partner’ again
after first meeting them, and the relationships lasted
for an average of at least seven months, with 18
per cent of them lasting over a year.
• men online were significantly more likely
to be committed to the relationship than women and
were more dependent on their ‘e-partner’.
• the
more the couple engaged in simultaneous online
chat before meeting rather than simply e-mailing
one another, the more they were found to depend
on one another emotionally and the more they understood
one another.
• those
who exchanged gifts before meeting had a more committed
and deeper relationship.
• the
more the couple talked on the telephone before
they met, the deeper the relationship.
Dr
Gavin, of the University’s Psychology Department,
and his co-authors, found that people using the internet
rarely used webcams, which allow computer users to
see one another, because they preferred the greater
anonymity of writing and using the telephone.
“This study shows that online dating can work
for many people, leading to a successful meeting for
almost everyone we surveyed,” said Dr Gavin.
“Given
that the most successful relationships lasted at
least seven months, and in some case over a year,
it seems that these relationships have a similar
level of success as ones formed in more conventional
ways.
“We
found that men tend to be more committed to the online
relationships than women, possibly because the anonymity
of writing gives them a chance to express their emotions
more readily than in real life.
“We also found that people are shying away from
using webcams because they feel it’s important
not see their partners for some time – there
is something special about text-based relationships.”
Dr Gavin believes that the reason that using the telephone
and online chatting indicates a deeper relationship
is that these are methods of simultaneous communication,
whereas e-mails are more formal.
Of
the relationships, 39 per cent were still going on
at the time of the survey, and of these 24 per cent
had been going for at least a year, and eight per cent
for at least two years. Of the relationships that had
already ended at the time of the survey, 14 per cent
had lasted over a year, and four percent had lasted
over two years.
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