Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Women Who Date Intelligent Men Likely To Hate Maths

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Apr, 2016 01:34 PM
    All women please take note! If you hate maths and science, look if you have an intelligent and smart partner as there may be a link between the two, finds an interesting study.
     
    The women who were part of the research performed worse in a maths test and tended to show less identification with math and less interest in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) careers.
     
    "What we found is that not all women reacted equally to these romantic goal primes," said lead study author Lora Park from the University at Buffalo in the US.
     
    "Women who had a traditional romantic partner preference of wanting to date someone smarter than themselves were the ones who distanced themselves the most from STEM fields when they thought about romantic goals," Park added in the paper published in the Journal of Applied Social Psychology.
     
    The finding suggests that the incompatibility may be most pronounced for women who prefer partners of greater intelligence.
     
    It involved more than 900 participants that established a link between a preference for dating smarter partners and traditional gender roles.
     
    Participants did not show less interest in careers often considered feminine, such as those in social work or elementary education.
     
    The results suggested that each activated a romantic goal and a pattern emerged that showed worse math performance, less identification with math and less interest in STEM careers for those women with traditional romantic partner preferences.
     
    Women show greater preference for dating smarter partners compared to men and the more they endorsed this preference the more traditional they were in their gender roles.
     
    "It's interesting that women who didn't have this partner preference tended to show better STEM outcomes, suggesting the more non-traditional preference might contribute to greater interest in STEM," Park suggested.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Burj Khalifa, the site for world's highest selfie

    Burj Khalifa, the site for world's highest selfie
    Taking the selfie phenomenon to a new level, a 47-year-old British photographer captured an image of himself on top of Dubai's Burj Khalifa, the tallest...

    Burj Khalifa, the site for world's highest selfie

    Shocking Revelation: Why America is losing out on female athletes

    Shocking Revelation: Why America is losing out on female athletes
    Pervasive, subtle gender biases and stereotyping by media is hampering the performance of American female athletes, a study contends....

    Shocking Revelation: Why America is losing out on female athletes

    'Sexual orientation not a choice, influenced by genetics'

    'Sexual orientation not a choice, influenced by genetics'
    In the largest study of its kind, genetic analysis of 409 pairs of gay brothers, including sets of twins, has linked sexual orientation in men with two regions...

    'Sexual orientation not a choice, influenced by genetics'

    Unveil Your Mind At First-ever Sex Exhibition in London

    Unveil Your Mind At First-ever Sex Exhibition in London
    With over 200 erotic objects, a sex exhibition titled "The Institute of Sexology" was Thursday opened for public at the prestigious Wellcome Collection in London.

    Unveil Your Mind At First-ever Sex Exhibition in London

    Eye for emotions ups your earnings

    Eye for emotions ups your earnings
    The researchers used a validated collection of images and recordings of actors and children - that is, of people who have learned to clearly express their feelings ...

    Eye for emotions ups your earnings

    Tough jobs may protect memory

    Tough jobs may protect memory
    If you hate your job because it requires complex work with other people or data, you may now discard the negative thoughts as researchers have found that complex......

    Tough jobs may protect memory