The science of a successful first date

How to size up a potential suitor using cold, hard scientific data

Eye contact could be a telling sign of a good date.
(Image credit: iStock)

Anyone who's ever spent time on the dating scene knows it can be brutal out there. First dates are especially grueling. The awkward getting-to-know-you question-and-answer session, the sleuthing for signs of their interest in you, and the awful feeling you get upon realizing you have to spend the rest of the evening in the company of someone with whom you have absolutely no chemistry.

Even online dating, which often relies on algorithms designed specifically to turn up a good match, can leave you empty handed and broken hearted. That's thanks in part to our own inability to tell the truth: One recent study revealed that 81 percent of online daters lie about themselves in their profiles. Men, for example, tend to lie about their age, height, and income; women are more likely to fudge on their weight, physical build, and age.

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Tammy Kennon
Tammy Kennon is a career journalist whose work appears in The New York Times, USA Today and Cruising World magazine, among others. After traveling aboard her sailboat for three years, she moved to Seattle where she writes about mental health, travel, and things too interesting to ignore.