Sentences with phrase «partner than participants»

Not exact matches

The company has since partnered with more than 60 other sources including the UK Biobank, which has recruited 500,000 participants.
We randomly partnered more than 300 participants and gave each pair seven slips of paper.
As the leading company in the booming obstacle course industry, Tough Mudder has already challenged over a million inspiring participants worldwide and raised more than $ 6.5 million dollars for its charity partner, Wounded Warrior Project.
According to the results, published online October 12 in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, participants who used hormonal contraceptives while choosing their partner were less attracted to him and less sexually satisfied during their relationship than were individuals who did not use hormonal birth control.
Similarly, research on online dating performed by Alison Lenton and Barbara Fasolo indicated that participants presented with more potential partners did not experience any greater emotional satisfaction than participants presented with fewer options.
In the second stage, each participant then played either with the same or different partner than they had played with in the first stage, ensuring in all cases that a first - stage loser was paired with a winner.
By comparison, individual fitness participants were allowed to maintain any exercise regimen they preferred, which could include activities like running and weight lifting, but they had to work out alone or with no more than two partners.
Researchers found that looking at photos of former partners stimulated several key areas of participants» brains much more than viewing pictures of «neutral» people.
«Participants with happy partners were significantly more likely to report better health, experience less physical impairment, and to exercise more frequently than participants with unhappy partners,» says the study, «even accounting for the impact of their own happiness and other life circumstaParticipants with happy partners were significantly more likely to report better health, experience less physical impairment, and to exercise more frequently than participants with unhappy partners,» says the study, «even accounting for the impact of their own happiness and other life circumstaparticipants with unhappy partners,» says the study, «even accounting for the impact of their own happiness and other life circumstances.»
One study had some interesting findings on this: participants perform better when they are paired up with a workout partner who is fitter than they are.
Although survey participants seemed convinced about the importance of intimacy for a healthy relationship, those that had gone without sex showed surprising commitment: of the 38 % who have previously been in a non-sexual dating relationship, as many as 50 % had stayed with their partner for more than one year.
More than 55 % of the participants said that either themselves or their friends had used dating sites to find a partner, with 31 % saying they would avoid it.
In the retrospective analysis of self - reported questionnaires, he found that while seeking sex online was associated with greater numbers of sexual partners, one - night stands, sex without condoms and failure to discuss partners» sexual histories, participants» daily diaries indicated that unprotected sex was less likely to occur with partners who met online than with partners who met elsewhere.
Just more than half of participants said they felt «very comfortable» talking to their partners about how to prevent STDs.
The tool is used by all program participants across the state and by more than two dozen of PASA's program partners.
The White House's College Opportunity Agenda and the First Lady's Reach Higher Initiative partnered to sponsor the invitation - only gathering that included a team of 25 «thought leaders» from Oregon among its more than 300 participants.
To date, participants in the TCPs have examined more than 1 900 energy - related topics, involving over 6 000 experts worldwide who represent nearly 300 public and private organisations located in 51 countries, including a large participation by IEA partner countries, such as China, India Mexico and Brazil.
By conducting a written survey of NWEI stakeholders including former course participants, course organizers, members of partner organizations, and staff members, I learned from the more than 40 responses I received that:
Rather than simply shadowing experienced associates and partners, participants are actively engaged in practical work and training activities that support the goals of the firm and its clients while fostering professional development.
Having the largest loyal audience of entrepreneurs with more than 200,000 active users, the BM community creates a simple platform for users and partners which will allow project participants to receive bonuses from the system, and partners — to reduce costs and fees for attracting.
At the 12 - month follow - up, skills - intervention participants reported fewer sexual partners compared with health control - intervention participants, and were less likely to test positive for STD than were health control - intervention participants.
A randomised controlled trial of a version of Group Triple P for fathers in New Zealand has shown that when men are treated as active participants in the parenting process, rather than being assumed to be there to play a supporting role, men are just as likely as their partner to actively participate in group sessions.
Participants who scored high on attachment avoidance found responsive partners to be less sexually desirable than did participants who were low iParticipants who scored high on attachment avoidance found responsive partners to be less sexually desirable than did participants who were low iparticipants who were low in avoidance.
Participants engaged in more relationship work with the partners than they did with their best friends at both time points.
Additionally, participants were more than twice as likely to choose the interaction partner the friend approved of.
To investigate these possibilities, more than 750 participants read one of two paragraphs about a same - sex potential friend («Joan» for women and «Jim» for men) where the friend was described as a 20 - year - old student with either 20 lifetime sexual partners (permissive condition) or 2 past partners (non-permissive condition).
Participants then answered a question about whether they typically fell in love quicker than their partner, participants also listed the number of people with whom they have been in love, how many times they experienced «love at first sight», and how many of their «loves» led to a rParticipants then answered a question about whether they typically fell in love quicker than their partner, participants also listed the number of people with whom they have been in love, how many times they experienced «love at first sight», and how many of their «loves» led to a rparticipants also listed the number of people with whom they have been in love, how many times they experienced «love at first sight», and how many of their «loves» led to a relationship.
But when participants took the role of the «gift receiver» they were actually more appreciative, and saw their partners as being more thoughtful, when their partners gave them a gift from their wish list rather than an alternative present.
For example, satisfied married couples coordinate, or mirror their body movements more during conflict discussions than dissatisfied couples.5 Another study found that when participants believed that they were interacting with someone from an out - group, they were more likely to synchronize their physical behaviors with them than an in - group member.4 If you are fighting with your partner and face the possibility of exclusion or rejection, you may unknowingly imitate him or her in order to feel closer to them.6
This is exactly what researchers find — when people are made to think about death, they report even higher relationship commitment than usual.1 Similarly, participants report wanting more intimacy with their partners after thinking about death.2
For potential partners with low mate value the opposite was true, such that participants with low mate value were more interested in making contact than those participants who had high mate value.
The researchers found that participants who shared grateful experiences with their partners reported more life satisfaction and happiness than participants in the other two conditions.
In a survey of more than 100 undergraduate students in the United States, participants indicated whether they had ever been dumped by text, chat / IM, email, a posting on a social networking site (like Facebook), or in a voicemail message.1 Similarly, participants reported on their likelihood of using these modes of communication to break up with a romantic partner and if they thought that using technology to break up was acceptable.
In other words, when avoidant participants believed their partners were feeling especially negative (which they believed happened more often than the partner reported), they responded in a more hostile way.
For those indicating that they relied more heavily on their parents than their friend for resources (such as receiving comfort and advice or financial assistance), the parent's approval or disapproval predicted how much participants liked the interaction partner.
If participants ever reported that they were 1 point (or more) less committed than their partner, they were coded as a 1 on the less committed variable.
Across all premarital waves of the focal relationship, if participants ever reported that they were 1 point (or more) more committed than their partner, they were coded as a 1 on the more committed variable.
Overall, I expect to find that the participants will perceive more similarity with their partner currently than retrospectively when the relationship began.
Furthermore, as they were completing the survey, the participants may have been influenced by lay theories that relational partners should be similar, and presumably more similar than when they first met (e.g., Morry, 2005).
One of the reasons for this is that participants are less likely to report serious stigmatizing crimes, such as assault and hitting a spouse or partner than minor delinquency (Babinski et al. 2001).
When participants» beliefs about their relationships were challenged by the researchers, those who believed that their partner was their soulmate were more likely to express relationship protecting thoughts than others.
They were used as secure base consistently more than fathers or peers for all age groups, and regardless of whether or not participants had romantic partners; but were used less for proximity and safe haven by the two older groups.
Romantic partners were used most and more than others for proximity; but were used less by early adolescents than by older participants.
Following on from this idea, research conducted in the US found that female participants evaluating a photo of a man found him to be slightly more romantically attractive and generally likeable if he was romantically available than if he was living with a romantic partner.
For the male participants in our study, the perception of one particular type of inequity in the work of relationship maintenance (over-benefit, or believing that the partner contributes more to relationship maintenance than the self) was associated with lower satisfaction and commitment.
We further eliminated two participants who reported living less than 30 miles from their partner and 11 participants who reported that they saw their partner «daily» or «a few times a week» (even though they had defined the relationship as long - distant).
Contrary to H1a, a greater percentage of participants perceived that one partner did more of the work of relationship initiation (64.2 %) than said the work was balanced or mutually shared (35.8 %), Χ2 (1) = 15.35, p <.001.
The first hypothesis for this study proposed that participants who were exposed to a single positive communication would evaluate the physical attractiveness of a dating partner differently than participants who were exposed to a single negative communication.
They found that married participants were less likely to report their sibling as an attachment figure than single participants, which generally indicates that romantic partners seem to move to the top of the attachment hierarchy.
Established in 1962, Metro MLS has one shareholder REALTOR ® association and 9 partner associations providing the same core products and MLS service for more than 7,200 MLS participants.
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