the researchers gave pairs of friends separate questionnaires on their lifestyles (how often they drank, exercised, etc.) and opinions (on topics such as abortion) and found that the bigger the school, the more similar friends were to one another. in follow-up research, not yet published, ms. bahns and her team found similar results comparing big cities like new york and chicago to smaller ones like iowa city and lawrence, kan.
how can more people and more diversity lead to less diverse friendships? it’s simple, really: we like people who are like us. social scientists call it the “similarity-attraction effect,” and it influences everything from whom we date and hire to where we choose to live. the bigger the pond, the more likely we are—consciously or not—to swim around until we find a group of like and like-minded people.
- the tribes of androids and iphones | via ninakix [emphasis mine]
-
sarculb likes this
-
cmoncase reblogged this from texturism
-
spitfiremcgee reblogged this from texturism
-
teddybear-hugs likes this
-
jems likes this
-
noraleah likes this
-
ghostponyroad likes this
-
jnncrtr likes this
-
swimmingundersoundwaves likes this
-
thechicinchicago reblogged this from texturism
-
lajefita likes this
-
applesandwine likes this
-
darkopolo likes this
-
texturism reblogged this from ninakix and added:
the researchers gave pairs of friends separate questionnaires on their lifestyles (how often they drank, exercised,...
-
texturism likes this
-
lisasanchez likes this
-
therestlessexploration likes this
-
ninakix posted this