Professor John Cacioppo of the University of Chicago conducted a survey to determine whether "online meetings are happier and will lead to longer lasting marriage." We surveyed 19,121 people who got married between 2005 and 2012 nationwide based on marital satisfaction, emotions, communication skills, and mutual love. The survey was done online and over the phone, with the help of eHarmony, using funds to find marital demographics data. Cacioppo discovered that there are many differences in cumulative data and that one third of marriages start with online dating sites.
According to a new survey, it is suggesting that meeting online with your spouse may mean longer and more happy marriage. Friend. Well, the numbers lead to this conclusion. In a typical sample of 19,131 people, couples who came online are unlikely to divorce 28% from offline matchers, and the happiest marriage began with a collection of MMORPG and social networks. However, there are warnings that these circumstances will come, that these differences are statistically significant, but not so large, and warning that the research results will be brought too close to the center directly from research design warnings
In this study, long lasting marriage was defined as a marriage lasting for at least 40 years after McKinnon and colleagues. Other studies have defined long lasting marriages ranging from 10 to 50 years or more. By limiting marriage to marriage lasting more than 40 years, samples unique to this study were born with a unique common culture. Their marriage survived surpassing the departure of marriage and "economic structural adjustment characterized by the collapse of the industrial economy, the rise of the economy of information and services, and the dramatic increase in the employment of women" (p.293 ). A couple of this research is still married in an era when it can be said that it has risen sharply in recent years in American history. From a usage point of view