Does being present boost attraction?
Being present and attentive on a date is associated with greater attraction, while co-present phone use (phubbing) is consistently negative. In a speed-dating study, each additional minute of observed mutual eye contact was associated with roughly tripled odds of a partner wanting to meet again (OR=2.80, 95% CI 1.22-6.32), and the association held after controlling for perceived physical attractiveness (OR=2.70, 95% CI 1.15-6.34). Lab experiments and survey research show co-present phone use lowers perceived attentiveness, conversation quality, perceived caring/affection, and interpersonal attraction, with the harm attributed to perceived neglect and violated expectations rather than the device itself. Note the eye-contact evidence is correlational, and the phubbing evidence comes from established couples and general dyadic interactions rather than first-date settings specifically.
Evidence & sources
- Sharing and Receiving Eye-Contact Predicts Mate Choice After a 5-Minute Conversation (speed-dating study, PMC)
Each additional minute of mutual eye contact was associated with ~threefold odds of a positive mate choice (OR=2.80, 95% CI 1.22-6.32, p=0.015); remained significant controlling for perceived attractiveness (OR=2.70, 95% CI 1.15-6.34). Observational/correlational speed-dating design, not a manipulation.
- UConn Today coverage of phubbing relationship research (Mar 2026)
Page resolves. Reports that feeling ignored due to a partner's phone use makes people feel less loved and cared for, and is linked to lower intimacy, emotional closeness, relationship quality, and satisfaction. Concerns established romantic relationships, not first dates.
- Co-present mobile phone use as an expectancy violation: two lab experiments (Social Influence, Tandfonline)
URL returns HTTP 403 to the fetcher (publisher bot-block) but confirmed real via Crossref: 'Co-present mobile phone use as an expectancy violation: revisiting phubbing in two lab-based experiments,' Social Influence (2024), Vanden Abeele, Frackowiak, Antheunis. Title/topic match the claim that phubbing as an expectancy violation degrades interaction quality; specific effect sizes on attentiveness/attraction could not