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News
Dating and intimacy on the Internet
The Internet is affecting dating and intimacy, according to articles published in the latest edition of Swinburne University's International Journal of Emerging Technologies and Society (IJETS).
In one article, Dating and Intimacy in the 21st Century: The Use of Online Dating Sites in Australia, University of Melbourne researchers, Dr Millsom Henry-Waring and Dr Jo Barraket conducted a web audit of more than 60 online dating sites and in-depth interviews with users of online dating services.
The researchers were looking at why people use online dating services and whether online dating alters the very nature of intimacy, emotion and dating.
They found that for many, using online dating sites was an informal and reasonably effective way of developing one's social and intimate circle, even if there were still some signs of stigma.
According to the authors a central and important feature of communicating online was through the drafting of one's personal profile - which was seen as your own personal ‘shop window'.
"Many of our participants talked about the fact that people were judged on the basis of how they looked, but also how their photos and profiles ‘talked' online," the study said.
The researchers also found that the nature of the communication between participants was revealing, due to the intensity, immediacy and in some ways, the almost addictive nature of the interaction.
"We have suggested that a type of ‘hypercommunication' occurs in the types of communication and also in the speed and intensity of the contact. As found in other studies, this appears to be facilitated by the informal and dis-inhibitive nature of the medium."
In a second article, Imagining Gay Life in the Internet Age author Ronald Reynolds from The University of New South Wales, reflects on his own experiences of Internet dating in the late 1990s.
He describes how the Internet has grown as a forum for dating and arranging casual sex, and how some are lamenting the demise of established forms of gay social life.
Reynolds likens gay Internet sites to other forms of consumerism, where people are "bombarded by choice and the prospect of more."
The International Journal of Emerging Technologies and Society is edited by staff from Swinburne University's Faculty of Life and Social Sciences. The latest edition can be accessed at www.swinburne.edu.au/ijets
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Media Contact: Crystal Ladiges (03) 9214 5064 or 0416 174 880
20.05.2008
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