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  • When was the last time that you thought about attraction?

  • Was it an hour ago?

  • 5 minutes?

  • 10 seconds?

  • It's likely that other people are thinking about it as much as you are.

  • Here's seven psychological things we do that make us less attractive.

  • Number one; acting cool and distant.

  • While procrastination might feel good, it isn't attractive.

  • In 1992, two psychologists named Marlon and Beach were curious about the relationship

  • between how many times you see someone and how attractive you find them.

  • They had four women pretend to be students in a large intro psych class.

  • At the end of the semester, students in the class were asked to rate how attractive they

  • found each of the women.

  • What the researchers found, was that the fewer classes a woman attended, the less attractive

  • they were rated by other students.

  • The other students basically forgot about her.

  • I'll try and remember this study the next time I have to psych myself up to go to class.

  • Number two; acting clingy.

  • It's the classic young love phenomenon, constantly hanging out together.

  • Three social psychologists from the University of California, San Diego, conducted a study

  • on the relationship between people's physical proximity and how much they like each other.

  • The researchers made a surprising discovery; they asked students to name who they liked

  • and disliked.

  • The researchers found that the students most liked people were those who they frequently

  • met face to face.

  • But the researchers also found that the student's least favorite people were those with whom

  • they were forced to spend time.

  • In other words, watch out that spending time with your crush doesn't end up with you getting

  • on their nerves.

  • Number three; acting as if you don't like your date all that much.

  • When grandma told you "it always pays to smile", where her words backed up by science?

  • Psychologist Curtis and Miller randomly paired participants; one student in the pair was

  • led to believe that their partner either liked or disliked them.

  • Those who thought they were liked were nicer and their partners ended up liking them more.

  • The researchers concluded that so called reciprocal liking is a self-fulfilling prophecy.

  • If your partner thinks you like them, they'll be nicer to you, which in turn makes the whole

  • relationship better.

  • And the opposite is also true; if they think that you don't like them, they'll be meaner

  • and the whole relationship will suffer.

  • Turns out that grandma was onto something.

  • Number four; revealing too much too soon.

  • In 2011, researchers told female undergrads that their Facebook profiles had been viewed

  • by male students, and that they would now be viewing the profiles of those guys.

  • You can probably imagine that the women were intrigued.

  • The women were split into groups and were told either that he liked their profile or

  • that the researchers didn't know whether he liked their profile.

  • The women were most attracted to the men who didn't reveal whether they liked the women.

  • Why?

  • The researchers decided that the more the women pondered the mysterious man, the more

  • he was on their mind, and the more intrigued they became.

  • Austin Powers nickname was actually pretty honest.

  • The magical man of mystery does get the dates.

  • Number five; going on boring dates.

  • Two psychologists in Vancouver, Canada, did a study on misattribution of arousal, which

  • is when people make mistaken inferences about what is causing them to feel the way they

  • do.

  • They had an attractive female research assistant give male participants a questionnaire.

  • In the first group, she asked them the questions while they were on a scary suspension bridge.

  • In the second group, she asked them while on a low, small bridge.

  • Those on the scary bridge were more excited because of the bridge and were more attracted

  • to the research assistant and more likely to call her later.

  • On your next date, don't just get coffee, that's boring.

  • Instead, go see fireworks or ride go-karts.

  • Number six; using cheesy pickup lines.

  • Psychologists who study attraction have identified three general strategies for pickup lines;

  • cute/flippant, for example "your place or mine?", innocuous such as "what do you think

  • of the music?" and direct, as in, "can I buy you lunch?".

  • A study asked men and women which pickup lines they prefer to receive. Most strategies worked

  • for men being approached by women.

  • However, women tend to prefer innocuous and direct lines over cute/flippant ones.

  • Bottom line; groaners aren't attractive.

  • So now you know.

  • Asking someone "did it hurt when you fell from heaven?" is scientifically the lamest

  • possible thing to say.

  • Number seven; not having a wingman or wingwomen.

  • Some people treat dating like a competition, but did you also know that there's lots of

  • room for cooperation among friends.

  • Having a third party make the introduction may be the best strategy of all for guys trying

  • to pick up women.

  • Especially in today's dating world where there's more choice than ever, daters have to overcome

  • many hurdles in order to catch someone's interest.

  • Having someone make the introduction for you automatically moves you past the difficult

  • first stage and it makes it clear that you're nice enough to have friends.

  • Sorry James Bond, but in the real world, the best romancers work in pairs.

  • In today's fast-paced dating world, people are quickly judged on first impressions.

  • But don't worry, all you have to do is make sure you never do any of these seven unattractive

  • things and you'll do fine.

  • Although, bringing chocolates never hurts either.

  • [Music]

When was the last time that you thought about attraction?

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B1 中級 美國腔

7種心理會讓我們的吸引力下降 (7 Psychological Things That Can Make Us Less Attractive)

  • 44 3
    Yukiko 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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