Who you are romantically involved with may be the most consequential decision of your life. The billionaire investor Warren Buffett certainly thinks so. He calls whom you marry “the most important decision that you make.” And yet people have rarely turned to science for help with this all-important decision.

Learning how to predict your romantic happiness is critical—and now large data sets can help you do it. Learn more about how to use science to up your dating game at the link in the bio.



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20 COMMENTS

  1. Nothing new really. Brief: people are dating wrong. We do not know how we should go about dating right but we Do know about popular qualities, which make zero difference that people are focused on.
    For personal reasons I’ve spent a number of years combining neuroscience, behavioral economics and psychology as well as my own observations, and my conclusion has been that Most people Date Wrong. They luck any reasonable logic instead just focusing on the beauty and/or financial aspects. There is Another way to do it if the purpose is longevity instead of fun.

  2. Summary of long-term romantic happiness: “Nobody can make you happy until you’re happy with yourself first.”

  3. I’m sorry, we’re going to billionaires for dating advice now? Because if they’re rich, they’re also omniscient and infallible in all things? 🙄😒

  4. From the article, they found they’re not able to predict romantic happiness from the data. But none of the data collected and analyzed has that much to do with what makes people feel happy? They looked at height, ethnicity, physical attractiveness, sexual preferences, and values, but in my experience happiness has something to do with things like how the person treats you and makes you feel? How they respond to challenges in their life? These can’t fully be captured in a values survey.

  5. Came into the comments section look for a summary. Got here too early and only encountered bots

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