About 77% of participants said they grew closer to their partners during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the study.
Student works in The College of New Jersey's Romantic Relationships Research Lab.FaceTime dates. Netflix parties. Old-fashioned love letters.
Strumolo, 22, of Morristown became so interested in the study, she asked to become a researcher herself.including projects Students, those who held the study and participated in it, received college credits for their involvement. Interviews, which lasted as long as 80 minutes, were held in Fall 2020 and Spring 2021.
“COVID put us in a situation where we needed to rely on our partners to deal with the stress,” she added. “My job was to ‘clean up the narratives,’ so making sure the software was able to process everything. For example, certain words being categorized as angry or sad words,” said Jose Cancel, 21, a senior from Clifton.
As interviews have continued some students in the group said they would be open to exploring expanding the pool of participants by sexual orientation, gender and background. Of those who were interviewed, 94% were female and 79% were heterosexual. Fisher, a renowned anthropologist, held her annual survey of 5,000 singles ages 18 to 21 in the United States in 2021. Since first beginning the survey over a decade ago, she has polled over 50,000 non-Match members.“The question that is most telling is, ‘Do you want to have a partner who wants to get married?’ Prior to the pandemic in 2018 it was 58% of singles…as of August it was 76%,” Fisher said.
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