Infidelity dissected: New research on why people cheat

September 8, 2008

The probability of someone cheating during the course of a relationship varies between 40 and 76 percent. "It's very high," says Geneviève Beaulieu-Pelletier, PhD student at the Université de Montréal's Department of Psychology.

"These numbers indicate that even if we get married with the best of intentions things don't always turn out the way we plan. What interests me about infidelity is why people are willing to conduct themselves in ways that could be very damaging to them and to their relationship."

The student wanted to know if the type of commitment a person has with his or her loved ones is correlated to the desire of having extra-marital affairs. "The emotional attachment we have with others is modeled on the type of parenting received during childhood," she says.

According to psychologists, people with avoidant attachment styles are individuals uncomfortable with intimacy and are therefore more likely to multiply sexual encounters and cheat. But this has never been proved scientifically, which is what Beaulieu-Pelletier attempted to do in a series of four studies.

The first study was conducted on 145 students with an average age of 23. Some 68 percent had thought about cheating and 41 percent had actually cheated. Sexual satisfaction aside, the results indicated a strong correlation between infidelity and people with an avoidant attachment style.

The second study was conducted on 270 adults with an average age of 27. About 54 percent had thought about cheating and 39 percent had actually cheated. But the correlation is the same: people with an avoidant attachment style are more likely to cheat.

"Infidelity could be a regulatory emotional strategy used by people with an avoidant attachment style. The act of cheating helps them avoid commitment phobia, distances them from their partner, and helps them keep their space and freedom."

Both these studies were followed up by two other studies that asked about the motives for infidelity. The will to distance themselves from commitment and their partner was the number one reason cited.

Her studies revealed no differences between men and women. Just as many men and women had an avoidant attachment style and the correlation with infidelity is just as strong on both sides. "Contrary to popular belief, infidelity isn't more prevalent in men," she says.

Source: University of Montreal


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  • Arikin - Sep 08, 2008
    • Rank: not rated yet
    Good job in keeping as objective as possible.

    May want to expand the age group and see if this still applies and to what degree.

    Hopefully, you aren't just testing the convenient college students on campus. :-)
  • Wired - Sep 08, 2008
    • Rank: not rated yet
    So they are saying that people who have not yet found the person with whom they want to be "attached" tend to seek out new relationships? LOL
  • D666 - Sep 09, 2008
    • Rank: 4.5 / 5 (2)
    Yet people generally think men cheat more. I have a theory about that, which I have done absolutely no scientific study on, so get the salt.
    I think that when men get cheated on, they clam up about it. It may be an ego thing, or a "don't show emotion" thing, or whatever. But you don't hear about it.
    When women get cheated on, they talk about it long and loud. They will buttonhole strangers on the street to tell them about their scumball ex. So you hear about cheating men. So the PERCEPTION is that men are cheating all over the place.

  • jburchel - Sep 09, 2008
    • Rank: 1 / 5 (2)
    File this one in the stupidly obvious category again... Who pays for crap like this?

September 8, 2008 all stories

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