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Reality Check! Traits you look for in your ideal soul mate

New York: While you are looking for an ideal partner for a romantic relationship, women show more attention towards men's negative qualities than positive ones, a new study has revealed. reserachers found in a study.

India TV Lifestyle Desk Published : Apr 20, 2016 7:14 IST, Updated : Apr 26, 2016 11:41 IST
Would-be Partner
Would-be Partner

New York: While you are looking for an ideal partner for a romantic relationship, women show more attention towards men's negative qualities than positive ones, a new study has revealed. researchers found in a study.

According to the study, researchers have found out that even if a man has many positive qualities, one or two negative qualities are sufficient for a woman to avoid a romantic relationship with him.

The study, published in the journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, examined the effect of deal breakers on the formation of romantic or sexual relationships in comparison to deal makers.

Using information from six independent studies, the researchers determined the top deal breakers for people -- unattractiveness, unhealthy lifestyle, undesirable personality traits, differing religious beliefs, limited social status, differing mating strategies, differing relationship goals.

"We have a general tendency to attend more closely to negative information than we do to positive information," said Gregory Webster from the University of Florida in the US.

The researchers found that the effect of deal breakers is stronger for women and people in committed relationships.

The researchers also evaluated deal breakers in non-romantic relationships.

The effect of negative traits in friendship is not as strong as in romantic relationships, but some deal breakers, like dishonesty, are avoided consistently in all situations.

"A lot of times, just by avoiding negative traits, people will probably be fairly well off -- maybe even better off -- than if they were trying to optimise the best potential partner," Webster explained.

The study's findings support adaptive attentional biases in human social cognition, which suggests that focusing on the negative serves as a survival function.

"Things that can harm are generally more important than things that can help you," Webster stated.

Although people typically think about potential mates in terms of their positive traits, Webster said that is because people subconsciously weed out those with undesirable traits from their pool of eligible mates.

(With IANS inputs)

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