(Press-News.org) CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — According to some popular culture writers and online posts by discouraged singles lamenting their inability to find romantic partners, dating is “broken,” fractured by the social isolation created by technology, pandemic lockdowns and potential partners’ unrealistic expectations.
Yet two studies of college students conducted a decade apart found that their ideas about romantic relationships have remained much the same, although the trajectories of their relationships have changed somewhat, according to study leader Brian Ogolsky, a professor of human development and family studies at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
“College students in our study did not share this perception of dating as a broken system, despite many massive cultural shifts during this decade,” Ogolsky said. “Their perspectives on relationships today aren’t that different from what they were 10 years ago — or even 10 years before that. Instead, young adults are taking more diverse and multifaceted pathways through romantic partnering and considering a broader range of outcomes.”
Ogolsky surveyed college students ages 18-29 in 2012 and in early 2022, asking them to describe their thoughts and experiences about the typical initiation and progression of romantic relationships.
Published in the journal Personal Relationships, the study was co-written by Jennifer L. Hardesty, a professor in the same department; psychology professor Kiersten Dobson of McMaster University; and U. of I. graduate students Matthew Rivas-Koehl and Ghada Kawas.
More than 250 students were surveyed, about half of whom said they had romantic partners at the time.
Based upon participants’ responses, the researchers identified four stages of romantic relationships. The first stage, which they called “flirtationship,” may occur online or in person and involves the first sparks of attraction, fanning those embers through flirtation and exploring common interests.
If the attraction and level of interest are mutual, the individuals test the waters for “relationship potential” — the second stage in relationship development — by spending increased time together, with a heavy focus on communicative activities that probe whether the relationship should move forward. Study participants repeatedly mentioned friendship as an important basis for romantic partnerships, and they most often mentioned dating in reference to this stage, the data indicated.
“Young adults clearly distinguish dating from being in a relationship,” Ogolsky said. “In our study, we used the term ‘relationship development’ to describe the activities we were investigating, but it became clear that participants did not view early behaviors as part of being in a relationship per se. Instead, they viewed flirting and even dating as part of a broader pattern of interpersonal interaction that may or may not eventually lead to the formation of a relationship.”
If romance does blossom and the union progresses to the third stage — being in a relationship — defining their union becomes important to the partners, such as labeling their status as “official” and identifying themselves as significant others, the researchers said.
Although those in the first study were less likely to mention sexual activity, students in both studies were more likely to talk about it in the context of defining the relationship. And the researchers found that the majority of the students in both studies implied an expectation of exclusivity and monogamy from committed relationships.
Although many studies on young adults’ relationships have focused on hookup culture — casual sex without commitment — only nine of those in the more recent study mentioned it. And the researchers hypothesized that college students may use the term when referring to sexual activity in any context, even that which occurs within a predefined relationship.
Ogolsky said it was during the third stage that the greatest differences emerged between the two groups of students’ beliefs. Those in the 2012 study were more likely to believe that the typical relationship path was for partners to become engaged after becoming official. However, those in the 2022 study rarely mentioned engagement, saying instead that commitment proceeds in more diverse pathways such as moving in together.
“Another difference we found pertained to integrating romantic partners into one’s social circle,” Ogolsky said. “For the students in 2012, this process centered around introducing a new partner to family members. However, those in the more recent study viewed it as integrating the partner into one’s broader social networks of friends as well as family members.”
In the fourth relationship stage — called “commitment or bust” — Ogolsky said that participants described arriving at an eventual crossroads, where the partners either decide to marry or enter into another type of long-term legal commitment or go their separate ways.
Surprisingly, despite the rapid growth in social media, dating apps and other platforms for meeting potential partners that proliferated across the decade between the two surveys, technology did not play as big a role in the minds of the participants as expected, Ogolsky said.
“When we ask people about relationship prototypes, they're not talking about technology,” he said. “They're thinking about relationships in broad strokes. And we found it interesting that the centerpiece of relationships was not dating apps, artificial intelligence or robots or all the other things we may have predicted 25 or 40 years ago.”
The work was supported by a HATCH grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.
END
Dating is not broken, but the trajectories of relationships have changed
2025-02-12
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Global study identifies markers for the five clinical stages of Parkinson’s disease
2025-02-12
From a study that analyzed brain images of more than 2,500 people with Parkinson’s disease in 20 different countries, scientists were able to identify patterns of neurodegeneration and create metrics for each of the five clinical stages of the disease.
The work, published in NPJ Parkinson’s Disease, represents a leap forward in the understanding of the disease. The analysis and volume of data obtained in the study could lead to important developments, not only in terms of diagnostic advances ...
Bacterial cellulose promotes plant tissue regeneration
2025-02-12
Press Release
Information embargoed until February 12, 2025 at 20:00h (time in Spain)
Bacterial cellulose promotes plant tissue regeneration
Researchers have successfully uncovered the molecular mechanisms by which bacterial cellulose patches stimulate the regeneration of plant wounds.
The regeneration process requires the activation of both hormonal and defense response pathways simultaneously.
These cellulose patches offer potential applications in grafting, pruning, and ornamental flower cutting for enhanced plant healing.
Bellaterra (Barcelona), ...
Biohybrid hand gestures with human muscles
2025-02-12
A biohybrid hand which can move objects and do a scissor gesture has been built by a team at the University of Tokyo and Waseda University in Japan. The researchers used thin strings of lab-grown muscle tissue bundled into sushilike rolls to give the fingers enough strength to contract. These multiple muscle tissue actuators (MuMuTAs), created by the researchers, are a major development towards building larger biohybrid limbs. While currently limited to the lab environment, MuMuTAs have the potential to advance future biohybrid prosthetics, aid drug testing on muscle tissue and broaden the potential of biohybrid robotics to mimic real-life forms.
“Rock, paper, ...
Diabetes can drive the evolution of antibiotic resistance
2025-02-12
Antibiotics are powerful, fast-acting medications designed to eradicate bacterial infections. However, in recent years, their dependability has waned as antibiotic resistant bacteria continues to evolve and spread.
Staphylococcus aureus is a leading cause of antibiotic resistance associated infections and deaths. It is also the most prevalent bacterial infection among those with diabetes mellitus, a chronic condition that affects blood sugar control and reduces the body’s ability to fight infections.
Microbiologists Brian Conlon, PhD, and Lance Thurlow, PhD, at the UNC School of Medicine have just shown that people with diabetes are more likely to develop antibiotic-resistant ...
ChatGPT has the potential to improve psychotherapeutic processes
2025-02-12
When it comes to comparing responses written by psychotherapists to those written by ChatGPT,the latter are generally rated higher, according to a study published February 12, 2025, in the open-access journal PLOS Mental Health by H. Dorian Hatch, from The Ohio State University and co-founder of Hatch Data and Mental Health, and colleagues
Whether machines could be therapists is a question that has received increased attention given some of the benefits of working with generative artificial intelligence (AI). Although previous research has found that humans ...
Prioritise vaccine boosters for vulnerable immunocompromised patients and prevent emergence of new COVID variants, say scientists
2025-02-12
Vaccinations alone may not be enough to protect people with compromised immune systems from infection, even if the vaccine has generated the production of antibodies, new research from the University of Cambridge has shown.
The findings, published today in Science Advances, suggest that such individuals will need regular vaccine boosters to protect them and reduce the risk of infections that could be severe and also lead to new ‘variants of concern’ emerging.
Almost 16 million people worldwide are estimated ...
California's most economically and culturally important species among those most vulnerable to projected climate change
2025-02-12
California's most economically and culturally important species among those most vulnerable to projected climate change, per Climate Vulnerability Assessment of 34 marine species.
###
Article URL: https://plos.io/4gslT5s
Article Title: A collaborative climate vulnerability assessment of California marine fishery species
Author Countries: U.S.
Funding: This work was funded by a grant from the Resource Legacy Fund (#15067). Though the funders helped determine the project's initial scope of work, they had no role in data collection and analysis, the decision to publish, or the preparation of the manuscript. END ...
Scientists develop novel self-healing electronic skin for health monitoring
2025-02-12
Los Angeles, CA – February 12, 2025—Researchers have achieved a breakthrough in wearable health technology by developing a novel self-healing electronic skin (E-Skin) that repairs itself in seconds after damage. This could potentially transform the landscape of personal health monitoring.
In a study published in Science Advances, scientists demonstrate an unprecedented advancement in E-Skin technology that recovers over 80% of its functionality within 10 seconds of being damaged – a dramatic improvement over existing technologies that can take minutes or hours to heal.
The technology seamlessly combines ultra-rapid self-healing capabilities, reliable ...
Models show intensifying wildfires in a warming world due to changes in vegetation and humidity; only a minor role for lightning
2025-02-12
Extreme fire seasons in recent years highlight the urgent need to better understand wildfires within the broader context of climate change. Under climate change, many drivers of wildfires are expected to change, such as the amount of carbon stored in vegetation, rainfall, and lightning strikes. Quantifying the relative importance of these processes in recent and future wildfire trends has remained challenging, because previous climate computer model simulations did not capture the full coupling between climate change, lightning, wildfires, smoke and corresponding shifts in solar ...
Unraveling the complex role of climate in dengue dynamics
2025-02-12
The research team led by KIM Jae Kyoung, Professor in the Department of Mathematical Sciences at KAIST and Chief Investigator of the Biomedical Mathematics Group at the Institute for Basic Science (IBS), has unveiled new insights into how weather influences the spread of dengue fever. Their study identifies temperature and rainfall as critical factors driving the global surge in dengue cases and offers actionable strategies for mitigating the disease's impact.
Dengue fever, a mosquito-borne disease, poses an increasingly alarming public health challenge. According to the World Health Organization, reported dengue cases surged from 4.1 ...