Romance Content / Romance Content for ºÙºÙÊÓƵ en Valentine’s Day Tip Sheet, Media Sources /news/valentines-day-tip-sheet-media-2 <p>Members of the media seeking a Valentine’s Day-themed story may find one here.</p> February 06, 2020 - 4:04pm Karen Michele Nikos /news/valentines-day-tip-sheet-media-2 Valentine’s Day Tip Sheet for Media /news/valentines-day-tip-sheet-media <p>Members of the media seeking a Valentine's Day-themed story may find one here.</p> February 11, 2019 - 11:43am Karen Michele Nikos /news/valentines-day-tip-sheet-media Long-Term and Short-Term Relationships Initially Indistinguishable /news/long-term-and-short-term-relationships-initially-indistinguishable <p>Long-term and short-term relationships are obviously different from each other. Some people are the type you’d want to marry; others are good primarily for the sex.</p> <p>At least, that’s how conventional wisdom goes. But new research out of the University of California, Davis, suggests that — at first — long-term and short-term relationships may look more or less identical.&nbsp;</p> May 14, 2018 - 4:27pm Karen Michele Nikos /news/long-term-and-short-term-relationships-initially-indistinguishable ºÙºÙÊÓƵ Story Tip Sheet for Valentine’s Day /news/uc-davis-story-tip-sheet-valentine%E2%80%99s-day <h2><strong>Romance, commitment </strong></h2> <p>Paul W. Eastwick, associate professor of psychology, investigates how people initiate romantic relationships and the psychological mechanisms that help romantic partners to remain committed and attached. One of his research programs examines how the qualities that people say are critically important to them in a romantic partner — their <a href="http://pauleastwick.com/ideals/">ideal partner preferences</a>&nbsp;— direct romantic partner selection and retention.</p> February 09, 2017 - 3:43pm Karen Michele Nikos /news/uc-davis-story-tip-sheet-valentine%E2%80%99s-day Nice Guys (and Girls) Do Not Finish Last in Love Relationships, ºÙºÙÊÓƵ Study Finds /news/nice-guys-and-women-do-not-finish-last-love-relationships-uc-davis-study-finds <p>If you want a member of the opposite sex to have a romantic interest in you, it’s best to be charming, empathetic and popular, not aggressive, according to a University of California, Davis, study of early adolescent relationships.</p> <p>Most of the time, youth have crushes on or pursue members of the opposite sex whom their peers approve of and don’t pursue those their friends don’t like, the study found.</p> February 12, 2016 - 10:13am Karen Michele Nikos /news/nice-guys-and-women-do-not-finish-last-love-relationships-uc-davis-study-finds