I apologize if some or some will be sad, but according to a new survey, those who publish important issues for their relations in the Facebook they feel "more insecure about their partner's feelings" than others who do not post at all. The research was recently published in the academic journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.
A team researchers led by Lydia Emery, a Ph.D. student at Northwestern University, asked 108 straight couples at a small university in Canada. The scientists asked each person in the couples to keep their own daily diary for two weeks, recording how they felt about their relationship, and how they thought the relationship was going each day. They then examined their public Facebook posts to discover posts about the couple, status updates and photo comments. The research team noticed an increase in interactions when one or the other of the couple felt that their relationship was not going well.
In recent years, there have been researches examining how romance is thriving in Facebok, perhaps because too many people worry that the social network destroys romance. It is true that Facebok it has so much information from each of its members that scientists data they can predict with frightening accuracy whether your relationship is temporary or will develop into a long-term one.
But what is the reason that leads people to publish more about their loved ones when they feel that things are wrong? To validate themselves in front of their friends? To remind their partner that they exist? To cause regret? To cause memories?
Whatever the reason, it is good to know that: The solution does not exist in Facebok.