The Phnom Penh Post

Dating app users more likely to seek serious relationsh­ip, study says

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CONTRARY to warnings that dating apps are encouragin­g superficia­l and shortlived flings over true romance, a Swiss study showed on December 30 that app users were more likely to be seeking longterm relationsh­ips.

Mobile apps have revolution­ised the way people meet around the world, and are quickly becoming the main way couples form in many countries.

Unlike traditiona­l dating sites, which require detailed user profiles, smartphone apps like Tinder and Grindr are largely based on rating photos with a swipe review system.

This has raised fears about the impact on the ways people interact, fall in love and create lasting connection­s.

But a study conducted at the University of Geneva (UNIG) and published in the PLOS ONE journal indicates that app-formed couples actually have stronger “cohabition intentions” than couples who meet offline.

“Large parts of the media claim they have a negative impact on the quality of relationsh­ips since they render people incapable of investing in an exclusive or long-term relationsh­ip,” report author Gina Potarca, a researcher at UNIG’s the Institute of Demography and Socioecono­mics, said in a statement.

“Up to now, though, there has been no evidence to prove this is the case.”

Potarca used a 2018 family survey by the Swiss Federal Statistica­l Office, analysing responses from over 3,000 people who were in a relationsh­ip and had met their partner in the past decade.

Her analysis showed that couples who met through an app were more motivated by the idea of living together than others.

“The study doesn’t say whether their final intention was to live together for the long or short term,” she said, adding though that since expressed desire to marry remained high across the board, “some of these couples likely see cohabitati­on as a trial period prior to marriage”.

The study also found that couples formed via dating apps expressed stronger desires and intentions to have children than others.

Couples who met through dating apps meanwhile also expressed the same level of satisfacti­on about their relationsh­ips as those who met their partners through more traditiona­l means.

Potarca said the findings were especially encouragin­g at a time when the coronaviru­s pandemic continues to place traditiona­l dating out of reach for many.

“Knowing that dating apps have likely become even more popular during [2020’s] periods of lockdow n and socia l dista ncing, it is reassuring to dismiss a larming concerns about the long-term ef fects of using t hese tools,” she said.

 ?? AFP ?? Contrary to media claims, a Swiss study showed on Wednesday that dating app users were more likely to be seeking long-term relationsh­ips.
AFP Contrary to media claims, a Swiss study showed on Wednesday that dating app users were more likely to be seeking long-term relationsh­ips.
 ?? AFP ?? A man and a woman take part in an evening of ‘silent speed dating’ in a bar in east London.
AFP A man and a woman take part in an evening of ‘silent speed dating’ in a bar in east London.

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