PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study: Women hurt more by breakups but recover more fully

2015-08-06
(Press-News.org) Women experience more emotional pain following a breakup, but they also more fully recover, according to new research from Binghamton University.

Researchers from Binghamton University and University College London asked 5,705 participants in 96 countries to rate the emotional and physical pain of a breakup on a scale of one (none) to 10 (unbearable). They found that women tend to be more negatively affected by breakups, reporting higher levels of both physical and emotional pain. Women averaged 6.84 in terms of emotional anguish versus 6.58 in men. In terms of physical pain, women averaged 4.21 versus men's 3.75. While breakups hit women the hardest emotionally and physically, women tend to recover more fully and come out emotionally stronger. Men, on the other hand, never full recover -- they simply move on.

According to Craig Morris, research associate at Binghamton University and lead author on the study, the differences boil down to biology. Women have more to lose by dating the wrong person.

"Put simply, women are evolved to invest far more in a relationship than a man," Morris said. "A brief romantic encounter could lead to nine months of pregnancy followed by many years of lactation for an ancestral woman, while the man may have 'left the scene' literally minutes after the encounter, with no further biological investment. It is this 'risk' of higher biological investment that, over evolutionary time, has made women choosier about selecting a high-quality mate. Hence, the loss of a relationship with a high-quality mate 'hurts' more for a woman."

Conversely, as men have evolved to compete for the romantic attention of women, the loss of a high-quality mate for a man may not "hurt" as much at first, Morris said.

"The man will likely feel the loss deeply and for a very long period of time as it 'sinks in' that he must 'start competing' all over again to replace what he has lost -- or worse still, come to the realization that the loss is irreplaceable," he said.

Morris said that breakups are important because most of us will experience an average of three by age 30, with at least one affecting us strongly enough that it substantially decreases our quality of life for weeks or months.

"People lose jobs, students withdraw from classes, and individuals can initiate extremely self-destructive behavior patterns following a breakup," he said. "With better understanding of this emotional and physical response to a breakup -- Post Relationship Grief -- we can perhaps develop a way to mitigate its effects in already high-risk individuals."

INFORMATION:

The study, "Quantitative Sex Differences in Response to the Dissolution of a Romantic Relationship," was published in Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences on July 31.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Patient-funded trials may do more harm than good, ethicists warn

2015-08-06
PITTSBURGH-- In the era of launching Kickstarter campaigns to pay for just about anything, Carnegie Mellon University ethicists warn that the trend of patients funding their own clinical trials may do more harm than good. CMU's Danielle Wenner and Alex John London and McGill University's Jonathan Kimmelman co-wrote a column in Cell Stem Cell outlining how patient-funded trials may seem like a beneficial new way to involve more patients in research and establish new funding opportunities, but instead they threaten scientific rigor, relevance, efficiency and fairness. "Patient-funded ...

Flexible dielectric polymer can stand the heat

Flexible dielectric polymer can stand the heat
2015-08-06
Easily manufactured, low cost, lightweight, flexible dielectric polymers that can operate at high temperatures may be the solution to energy storage and power conversion in electric vehicles and other high temperature applications, according to a team of Penn State engineers. "Ceramics are usually the choice for energy storage dielectrics for high temperature applications, but they are heavy, weight is a consideration and they are often also brittle," said Qing Wang, professor of materials science and engineering, Penn State. "Polymers have a low working temperature and ...

Mutant cells that can't copy DNA keep dividing when they shouldn't

2015-08-06
Researchers at USC have developed a yeast model to study a gene mutation that disrupts the duplication of DNA, causing massive damage to a cell's chromosomes, while somehow allowing the cell to continue dividing. The result is a mess: Zombie cells that by all rights shouldn't be able to survive, let alone divide, with their chromosomes shattered and strung out between tiny micronuclei. Sometimes they're connected to each other by ultrafine DNA bridges. (Imagine tearing apart a hot pizza - these DNA bridges are like strings of cheese still draping between the separated ...

Domestic violence coalitions can reduce intimate partner violence

2015-08-06
WASHINGTON - The Society for Public Health Education (SOPHE) announces the publication of a Health Education & Behavior theme section devoted to the latest research on domestic violence prevention and the effectiveness of community coalitions in 19 states to prevent and reduce intimate partner violence. The theme section "DELTA PREP" (Domestic Violence Prevention Enhancement and Leadership Through Alliances and Preparing and Raising Expectations for Prevention) presents findings from a multi-site project supported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) ...

Abusive men put female partners at greater sexual risk, study finds

2015-08-06
Abusive men put female partners at greater sexual risk, study finds Abusive and controlling men are more likely to put their female partners at sexual risk, and the level of that risk escalates along with the abusive behavior, a UW study found. Published in the Journal of Sex Research in July, the study looked at patterns of risky sexual behavior among heterosexual men aged 18 to 25, including some who self-reported using abusive and/or controlling behaviors in their relationships and others who didn't. The research found that men who were physically and sexually ...

Rapid aging of the thymus linked to decline in free radical defenses

2015-08-06
A critical immune organ called the thymus shrinks rapidly with age, putting older individuals at greater risk for life-threatening infections. A study published August 6 in Cell Reports reveals that thymus atrophy may stem from a decline in its ability to protect against DNA damage from free radicals. The damage accelerates metabolic dysfunction in the organ, progressively reducing its production of pathogen-fighting T cells. The findings suggest that common dietary antioxidants may slow thymus atrophy and could represent a promising treatment strategy for protecting ...

New research tool tracks real-time DNA-protein binding in cells

2015-08-06
CINCINNATI - Researchers have developed a new technology that precisely marks where groups of regulatory proteins called transcription factors bind DNA in the nuclei of live cells. Reporting their data Aug. 6 in the journal Molecular Cell, scientists at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center say the new technology - called SpDamID - could allow scientists to answer basic questions about tissue development and disease that existing technology cannot address. "With further development this technology has the potential to give investigators glimpses into biological ...

Genders differ dramatically in evolved mate preferences

2015-08-06
AUSTIN, Texas -- Men's and women's ideas of the perfect mate differ significantly due to evolutionary pressures, according to a cross-cultural study on multiple mate preferences by psychologists at The University of Texas at Austin. The study of 4,764 men and 5,389 women in 33 countries and 37 cultures showed that sex differences in mate preferences are much larger than previously appreciated and stable across cultures. "Many want to believe that women and men are identical in their underlying psychology, but the genders differ strikingly in their evolved mate preferences ...

Paleo diet: Big brains needed carbs

2015-08-06
Understanding how and why we evolved such large brains is one of the most puzzling issues in the study of human evolution. It is widely accepted that brain size increase is partly linked to changes in diet over the last 3 million years, and increases in meat consumption and the development of cooking have received particular attention from the scientific community. In a new study published in The Quarterly Review of Biology, http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/682587, Dr. Karen Hardy and her team bring together archaeological, anthropological, genetic, physiological and ...

Fly model of motor neuron degeneration provides new avenues for exploration in humans

Fly model of motor neuron degeneration provides new avenues for exploration in humans
2015-08-06
Researchers at the Babraham Institute and University of Massachusetts Medical School in the United States have developed a new model to study motor neuron degeneration and have used this to identify three genes involved in the neurodegeneration process. These findings could have relevance for understanding the progression of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and other forms of motor neuron disease (MND). ALS is the most common form of adult-onset motor neuron disease and kills over 1,200 people a year in the UK. The researchers developed a new model to study neurodegeneration ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Detecting lung cancer 4 months earlier at the GP using artificial intelligence

Safer opioid supply improves health outcomes among people at high risk of overdose

Micronanoplastics found in artery-clogging plaque in the neck

TOS statement on oral GLP-1s

Pulmonary fibrosis has no cure. Could a cancer drug hold the answer?

Trial explores drug-free approach to treat ADHD symptoms in children exposed to alcohol before birth

New research points out a promising strategy for treating metastatic medulloblastoma

Light fields with extraordinary structure: plasmonic skyrmion bags

DNA origami guides new possibilities in the fight against pancreatic cancer

PREPSOIL launches assessment tool for soil living lab and lighthouse initiatives

Lebanon crisis driving parents to seek unregulated “shadow” education, study shows

The AGA Research Foundation awards $2.4 million in digestive health research funding

A repurposed anti-inflammatory drug may help treat alcohol use disorder and related pain

Obesity disrupts “reaction time” to starvation in mice

Listening to an avatar makes you more likely to gamble

Facial expressions of avatars promote risky decision-making

PREPSOIL Final Event: Facilitating the deployment of the Mission Soil across European regions

Politecnico di Milano: a study in Earth’s future on agrivoltaics reducing the competition between food and energy

Listeners use gestures to predict upcoming words

An AI tool grounded in evidence-based medicine outperformed other AI tools — and most doctors — on USMLE exams

Adolescents who sleep longer perform better at cognitive tasks

A ‘dopamine detox’ is too simplistic, new study finds

Alcohol use and abusive or neglectful behaviors among family caregivers of patients with dementia

Childhood exposure to air pollution, BMI trajectories and insulin resistance among young adults

JMIR Aging launches new section focused on advance care planning for older adults

Astronomers discover a planet that’s rapidly disintegrating, producing a comet-like tail

Study reveals gaps in flu treatment for high-risk adults

Oil cleanup agents do not impede natural biodegradation

AI algorithm can help identify high-risk heart patients to quickly diagnose, expedite, and improve care

Telemedicine had an impact on carbon emissions equivalent to reducing up to 130,000 car trips each month in 2023

[Press-News.org] Study: Women hurt more by breakups but recover more fully