Posting sexy pictures on dating profiles can be a turn-off and undermine a person's long-term appeal, according to new research.
Highly sexualized online profiles reduce the person's attractiveness over time, suggest the study.
The findings, published in the journal Cyberpsychology, showed that sexualized profiles were judged more negatively and elicited significantly less interest in long-term relationships.
Researchers conducted a series of experiments to evaluate how sexualized online dating profiles shape viewers' perceptions and relationship intentions.
She worked with graduate student Kobi Zholtack and Professor Harry Reis of the University of Rochester.
Professor Gurit Birnbaum, a sexuality researcher at the Baruch Ivcher School of Psychology at Reichman University. (Gilad Kavalerchik via SWNS)
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Birnbaum said: "In today's crowded and highly competitive dating market, many people want to stand out.
"And a sexy photo can do that fast.
"After all, photos are the gatekeepers of dating apps: if someone's profile picture doesn't catch your eye, swiping left is almost automatic. You may never even get to their personality.
"But the same strategy may come with unintended costs.
"Potential partners may come to see the profile owner less as a full person and more as a means of fulfilling a fantasy.
"They may assume that a sexy body is all that person has to offer, perceiving them as less intelligent or interesting than they really are.
"They may also infer that the profile owner is better suited for a short-term encounter than for a serious, long-term relationship."
The research team conducted three studies examining whether sexualized profiles influence how people perceive the person behind the profile - and, importantly, why and when sexualization can backfire.
(Photo by Anastasia Shuraeva via Pexels)
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The first study looked at whether sexualized profiles reduce relationship appeal.
Single participants viewed dating profiles that were either "sexualized" - with revealing clothing, flirtatious poses or expressions - or "non-sexualized" - with modest clothing, natural poses and expressions.
The researchers matched the photos on attractiveness, lighting, and angle, so the only difference was the sexualized presentation.
After viewing the profiles, participants rated how they saw the profile owner.
For example, how much they were seen as a "person" versus a sexual object, whether they seemed like a good long-term partner, and what kind of relationship they seemed to be looking for.
Participants also reported whether they themselves would be interested in a long-term relationship with that person.
Birnbaum said: "The results clearly showed that sexualized profiles were judged more negatively and elicited significantly less interest in long-term relationships.
(Photo by Radis B via Pexels)
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"In other words, the participants might have been interested in looking, but they weren't interested in staying.
"At the same time, the first study had an important limitation: the sexualized and non-sexualized profiles featured different people.
"This left open the possibility that participants were responding not only to the level of sexualization but also to the specific individuals shown."
The second study looked at why long-term interest is lower for people with sexualized profiles.
To address that limitation and better understand the mechanism involved, the second study moved beyond static photographs.
Participants watched a short video introduction featuring the same person in both the sexualized and non-sexualized versions.
The researchers explained that it mattered because people weren't just reacting to a face, charm, or a "vibe."
They were reacting primarily to how that person presented themselves.
The pattern held as people with sexualized profiles were seen as less suitable long-term partners, and that helped explain why participants were less interested in a meaningful relationship with them.
(Photo by Ivan S via Pexels)
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For the third study, the researchers tested whether a sexy profile photo can be balanced by a more human biography that shows concern for others.
Participants saw profiles that varied in both the photo - sexualized or non-sexualized - and the written description.
That allowed the researchers to test whether signaling caring qualities and depth can soften the negative assumptions that a sexualized photo sometimes triggers.
The "communal" - or caring - self-description included statements such as "I love meeting up with friends, taking sunset beach walks, volunteering with the elderly, and assisting them on a weekly basis."
A neutral self-description included statements such as: "I like the beach, going to parties, and just enjoying life."
Birnbaum said: "The meaning of a sexy photo depends on the rest of the profile and on who is doing the judging.
"For men viewing women's profiles, a warm bio was reassuring. It signaled that behind the sexy photo was someone capable of a real partnership.
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