It should come as no surprise that people draw deep personal conclusions based on dating profiles.
Marketing researchers created a "traditional/uptight" and an "open/free-spirited" fake dating profile for two people in Boston and then asked 65 undergraduates at a US university to rate them on categories like trustworthiness, conscientiousness, and agreeableness.
Here are the profiles (uptight on the left, free-spirited on the right):
The uptight profiles - you know, the ones where the person has a shirt on - outperformed the free-spirited profiles on two key tests: trustworthiness and interpersonal attraction.
The two profiles scored differently on the "Big Five" personality traits of openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism. Which of those traits are good is largely a matter of preference.
The study, "A Match Made...Online?" was produced by Seunga Venus Jin, PhD and Cassie Martin, BA and published in Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking.
As a caveat, remember that the study was small, and it was based on college students. Perhaps non-college students have more respect for wild and crazy dating profiles ... but we wouldn't count on it.