Alexander Profile picture
Feb 11 14 tweets 5 min read
New study on male dating app profiles and matches:

"Only one profile out of 100 was liked by more than 80% of women."
This is an effect that I have described in the past. Although we see high inter-rater agreement on attractiveness, agreement of individual pairs in a sample can be much lower. In other words, there can be high disagreement even for what an attractive face is.
Here are rejects and accepts per profile.
Age predicted attractiveness ratings and swipes for men: men too much older, or too much younger, than the women were penalized.

Pretty consistent with past research indicating that women don't like large age gaps.

Profiles without clear facial photos were also liked less.
Here are accepts/rejects by participant swiping. Also some variation here, with some women being much more selective than others.
The bottom 10% of rejected male profiles - profiles where faces could not be seen clearly.

Important in naturalistic dating app data - lots of profiles get rejected because the photos are really bad, etc, not because person is extremely ugly.
A point in this paper is that it's easier to predict the profiles that get rejected than it is to predict the ones that are accepted.
Asking participants why they swiped on who they did: attractiveness at the top, and personality in the model.

If you are skeptical that "personality" matters at all on Tinder, app research has consistently shown profiles with text descriptions get many times more matches.
They did some brain imaging with an fNIRS during a swiping on profiles task, but actually included no analysis at all of this. They just included the images they created and a short paragraph.

Unfortunately not very informative.
In the introduction section, they didn't explain why they did this or explain why they looked in that area. No statistics comparing areas of activation.
Probably looking in the wrong place. At least for facial attractiveness, activation is usually associated with the orbital frontal cortex and ventromedial prefrontal cortex.
vmPFC also implicated in the selection of attractive and unattractive faces in behavioral tasks.
fNIRS has pretty low resolution and depth, it may not be ideal for something like this. It has a penetration of about 3cm so you're limited to the cortical surface.

You can see where it is placed and that it's not going to reach some areas of interest.
The behavioral data is pretty consistent with past research on dating apps however.

Women are selective in this environment. Matches aren't evenly distributed across male profiles. Big age gaps usually don't help. Attractiveness reported as a top factor for selection.

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More from @datepsych

Feb 10
About twice as many men age 18-29 report being single than women in the same age group. 🧵
This is a result similar to Pew's data from 2019 here:
My first thought would be that men and women who are together in some romantic way disagree on what it means to be single.

But, looking at the methodology I don't think that this is a likely explanation.

Question asked:

"Are you currently in a committed romantic relationship."
Read 25 tweets
Feb 9
New paper on general sex differences between men and women - perhaps larger than many might imagine. 🧵
A little bit of background - debate on the magnitude of sex differences. Sex differences exist, some disagreement on how large they are across domains.

Disagreement may be due in part to how we measure sex differences.
Two different camps: those who think sex differences are relatively small and those who think they are larger.
Read 19 tweets
Feb 8
Young men self-rated their intelligence higher than young women, but self-ratings did not predict actual performance in cognitive assessments.

Higher self-ratings of intelligence also predicted higher self-ratings of attractiveness and health.

onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/br…
Cognitive assessments used. No sex differences in performance on these that would correspond with justifiably higher self-ratings.
Partial replication of this paper: men estimated their IQ higher than women, but no sex difference in cognitive performance.

Self-rated intelligence was predictive of IQ here.

Same effect of high self-raters of IQ: self-rating as more attractive, etc.

mdpi.com/2079-3200/8/1/6
Read 4 tweets
Feb 8
Paper on incels. Incels have a greater fear of being single, score higher in anxiety/depression measures, higher in avoidant attachment style, and lower in self-esteem and secure attachment style.

link.springer.com/article/10.100… Image
Lots of additional personality and mental health measures here.

High loneliness, low perceived social support, high behavioral disengagement.

Incels also higher in social dominance orientation, sexual entitlement, and belief in female deceptiveness. ImageImageImage
Politically - sample of incels here isn't far right. Similar to the non-incel sample. I made a quick chart to visualize: ImageImage
Read 4 tweets
Feb 5
Here is a new report from the International Centre for Counter-Terrorism on incels/MGTOW/PUA/right wing forums.

Has some politics, a theme I usually try to avoid, but I'll report the results here anyway.

Similar forum-based textual analysis of content to a recent thread 🧵
Here are the forums and online communities that were included in this analysis.

Grouped into: incels, "chauvinist far right," MGTOW, MRA, and PUA. ImageImage
Here is the methodology used.

The Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (LIWC) algorithm to analyze the posts.

This generates a categorization of features, such as violent content, but perhaps more interestingly also psychologically emotional content. ImageImage
Read 14 tweets
Feb 4
In a large Spanish sample, sex differences in sexual orientation and behavior/intention.

86.8% of men and 68.5% of women reported being exclusively attracted to the opposite sex.

link.springer.com/article/10.100…
Here are sex differences in some aesthetic/erotic experiences. Women are also more likely to report same-sex fantasies.
Meanwhile, men report higher discomfort for things like: finding other men attractive, having same-sex fantasies, and same-sex intercourse.
Read 6 tweets

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