Prove Statistically: Once a cheater, Always a cheater

Dellas

Well-Known Member
University of Denver psychology graduate student Kayla Knopp studied 484 unmarried adults aged 18 to 35 to find out if people who stray in one relationship are more likely to do so in the next. Her findings were presented at the annual American Psychological Association convention in Washington D.C.. Knopp and her fellow researchers asked participants questions such as, "Have you had sexual relations with someone other than your partner since you began seriously dating?" and "Has your partner had sexual relations with someone other than you since you seriously began dating?"


Those who admitted to having sexual relations outside their relationship were three and a half times more likely to do so in their next relationship as well, Knopp explained to The Huffington Post in an email. "This means that of those people who said they had sex with someone else in their first relationship, about 45 percent said they also had outside sexual contact with someone in their next relationship," Knopp said. The cheating pattern carries over into the lives of non-cheaters as well; participants who had unfaithful partners in their last relationship were three times more likely to be cheated on again. And people who suspected their partners of cheating were 10 times as likely to be suspicious in their next relationships. "We can't say for sure what this means," Knopp tells The Huffington Post, "But I think it indicates that how people are feeling about trust, fidelity, and commitment in their relationships is even more salient than what their partners are actually doing."


The study does have it's limitations, however. As Knopp explained to The Huffington Post, she and her team specifically asked participants about "sexual contact" with someone other than their partner, which doesn't include non-sexual infidelity such as emotional affairs, online relationships, sexting, or even behaviors like kissing. The sample also didn't include people in same-sex relationships. Still, there's a lot to be learned; while the study doesn't reveal why people cheat, it can help those who have been through it plan for the future. "Our advice would be to talk with your partner about your relationship histories. If one or both of you has had trouble staying faithful in the past, what happened then? Might it happen again? How can you and your partner anticipate those difficulties together, and tackle them as a team?" Knopp advised. "Many people expect monogamy and fidelity to just happen easily, but we know that isn't true. Commitment takes effort and communication, and being able to confront the possibility that you or your partner might struggle to maintain fidelity can make you better able to handle those challenges in the future."

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And this is why, even though I respect someone's right to do what works for them in their relationship, I would never advise someone to forgive infidelity.
 
While different people cheat for varying reasons, the same individual typically tends to cheat for the same reason in every relationship (this person does it for the thrill, this person does it because they feel unappreciated). I think this has a lot to do with the person someone chooses as a mate. For example, a woman who is a serial cheater cheats because she feels ignored, but she ALWAYS chooses a cold, aloof man as a mate. A man thinks his gf is boring in bed so he seeks outside p, but he ALWAYS chooses quiet, unassuming, sexually inexperienced women to be with. It's a dynamic, and people rarely learn from their mistakes and repeat the dynamic ad infinitum.
 
I think it would stand to reason. I have never understood when one partner (male or female) gets with a married person and gets them to be unfaithful to their partner and after the inevitable break up, marries them.....not expecting that THEY will be in exactly the same position in a few years
 
^ that's not always true in my reality.

Relationships are dynamic. How you behave in one context MAY not be the same in the next.
There's just no one rule. I'm humbling myself because I've been on the "bad" side.

No black or white here....
 
I think if a man or woman validates themselves by the attention of men and women. They tend to cheat for the sake of that. Those are the one where you will always fight an uphill battle.
 
The article doesn't support the thread title.

If 45% cheated in the next relationship then 55% didn't say they cheated in the relationship. I don't see anything proven here. It's a 50, 50 chance.

I also want them to answer the question of what percentage cheat again in the same relationship. I think this would be more useful.

I'm not advocating dating someone who has cheated. Just would like articles that really give more useful information.
 
The article doesn't support the thread title.

If 45% cheated in the next relationship then 55% didn't say they cheated in the relationship. I don't see anything proven here. It's a 50, 50 chance.

I also want them to answer the question of what percentage cheat again in the same relationship. I think this would be more useful.

I'm not advocating dating someone who has cheated. Just would like articles that really give more useful information.

Ita.

Also, this article is a bit sensational. It lacks important details. I realllly don't feel like putting on my Sociology cap, but there seems to be a lot of assumptions here.
 
[USER=84721 said:
keyawarren[/USER];20457297]Ita.

Also, this article is a bit sensational. It lacks important details. I realllly don't feel like putting on my Sociology cap, but there seems to be a lot of assumptions here.

Yeah, I need to stop reading these lazily written articles. I need someone to create an organization that stamps articles as worth reading :lol:
 
Yeah, I need to stop reading these lazily written articles. I need someone to create an organization that stamps articles as worth reading :lol:


Amen sista. AMEN!

That....and also rates people. Too many folks write things and then it gets circulated as if the opinion of that one person should matter. I mean what has that person done that I should give weight to their SOLE opinion even if it's in a well written article.
 
People who cheat for the thrill of it usually cheat In all relationships . There are variables

THIS !!!

I have good male friends who basically said this ... Its the thrill of the chase, thrill of getting away with it, the rush of sneaking around etc :rolleyes:

also I've found that people (male and female) who don't need to have emotional ties with someone to have sex with them will always cheat ... these are the ones who end up saying "but it didn't mean anything, it was just sex"
 
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