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    "result": {"data":{"markdownRemark":{"html":"<p>How do politics affect non-political decisions? A key aspect of this question concerns the extent to which partisan biases stem from out-group animus or assumptions about associated traits. To address this question, we focus on online dating to identify factors that mitigate these biases. Through a conjoint experiment with 3,000 UK participants, we disentangle the influence of partisanship from political and non-political confounding factors. We show that partisanship and physical appearance equally influence dating decisions. At the same time though, political tolerance has a significantly stronger effect. Our results also indicate important asymmetries in preferences among partisans. While both exhibit an in-party bias, Labour supporters were roughly twice as likely to choose co-partisan dates compared to Conservatives. Counter-stereotypic traits mitigate partisan biases among Conservatives but exacerbate them among Labour supporters. The overarching theme discerned is clear while partisanship undoubtedly holds sway in the dating realm, other factors — many previously overlooked or under-emphasized — can meaningfully mediate its influence.</p>","frontmatter":{"title":"Sleeping With the Enemy: Partisan Sorting in Online Dating","authors":"Yara Sleiman, George Melios, Paul Dolan","journal":"Political Science Research & Methods","year":"2025","cta":"https://doi.org/10.1017/psrm.2025.30","bib":"/papers/dating.bib","code":null,"pdf":"/papers/dating.pdf","github":null,"external":"https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/political-science-research-and-methods/article/sleeping-with-the-enemy-partisanship-and-tolerance-in-online-dating/628B2BD08EA384301E87E577305F4865","slug":"dating"}}},"pageContext":{"slug":"dating"}},
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