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19 September 2025
More and more men have digital partners — even while in relationships. A new US study suggests AI is replacing relationships, and links its use to poorer wellbeing and lower life satisfaction — especially among the young.
AI is entering our lives faster than you might think. Not only at work and in school — increasingly also in matters of the heart. Researchers at Brigham Young University and Texas Tech set out to see how far this has gone. They focused on young Americans — and discovered something that may surprise you.
The study surveyed 2,969 men in the United States. Each answered three key questions that revealed what their relationship with AI really looks like:
If a man answered “yes” to even one question, he moved on to another, far more detailed set. The researchers wanted to know not only how often, but also why men choose virtual partners and whether they truly believe that AI could replace real relationships. The questions covered the frequency and nature of such interactions and whether respondents thought the world of AI might fully substitute for real-life intimacy.
Additionally, the team examined how these choices affect participants’ mental health — their mood, life satisfaction, and relationships with others. The study considered:
Finally, the researchers went a step further and tested whether contact with AI influences mental health. Using advanced data analysis, they mapped how using virtual partners relates to life satisfaction and psychological health. It turned out that AI, in relationships of this kind, does not always bring happiness.
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The results, published in the Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, may surprise you. Nearly one in four men engaged with AI chatbots that simulated a romantic relationship.
The authors — Brian J. Willoughby and a team at Brigham Young University — point out that demographic factors shape engagement with AI technologies, and that use of these tools often correlates with lower psychological wellbeing and poorer mood.
The researchers found that men who used AI to satisfy fantasies more often reported symptoms of depression and declared lower life satisfaction. Most interestingly, they were not mainly single. More often, they were people in relationships who treat digital content as an add-on to a real relationship. This finding may upend our assumptions about why AI is replacing relationships.
Ultimately, the data point in the same direction: AI is replacing relationships for a visible share of men, yet it rarely makes them happier — and, for now, it often coincides with lower wellbeing.
Read the original article: Co czwarty mężczyzna ma cyfrową partnerkę. To już globalny trend
Humanism
18 September 2025
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