Title :
“Shopping” for a Mate: Expected versus Experienced Preferences in Online Mate Choice
Author :
Lenton, Alison P. ; Fasolo, Barbara ; Todd, Peter M.
fDate :
6/1/2008 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Modern communication technology has greatly increased the number of options we can choose among in a variety of evolutionarily important domains, from housing to food to mates. But is this greater choice beneficial? To find out, we ran two experimental studies to examine the effects of increasing option set-size on anticipated and experienced choice perceptions in the modern context of online mate choice. While participants expected greater enjoyment, increased satisfaction, and less regret when choosing from larger (versus smaller) sets of prospective partners (at least up to a point; Study 1), participants presented with a supposedly ideal number of options experienced no improvement in affect and showed more memory confusions regarding their choice than did those participants presented with fewer options (Study 2). Participants correctly anticipated that greater choice would yield increasing costs, but they overestimated the point at which this would occur. We offer an evolutionary-cognitive framework within which to understand this misperception, discuss factors that may make it difficult for decision-makers to correct for it, and suggest ways in which dating websites could be designed to help users choose from large option sets.
Keywords :
behavioural sciences; Website dating; communication technology; evolutionary cognitive framework; ideal options; online mate choice; Bicycles; Communications technology; Costs; Economic forecasting; Face; Humans; Internet; Psychology; Radio access networks; Web page design; Affective forecasting; choice overload; evolutionary psychology; mate choice; online dating; too-much-choice;
Journal_Title :
Professional Communication, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPC.2008.2000342