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Want to feel loved? Penn State study finds all you need is this

  • Researchers from Penn State published a 28-day study in 2025 showing that expressing love increases feelings of being loved over time.
  • The study recruited 52 mostly White adults who reported on their love experiences up to six times daily using ecological momentary assessment.
  • A separate University of Texas study found that text messages with emojis are seen as more emotionally responsive and boost relationship closeness and satisfaction.
  • Marriage therapist Dr. Marisa T. Cohen emphasized the need to ensure that all parties understand an emoji in the same way, as people from various generations often use different emojis to convey their feelings.
  • These findings indicate expressing love and using emojis deepen emotional intimacy and may offer practical ways to address growing social disconnection and loneliness.
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Want to feel loved? Penn State study finds all you need is this

A new study reveals that performing small, everyday acts of love boosts feelings of being loved.

·Cherokee County, United States
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Newsweek broke the news in United States on Wednesday, July 2, 2025.
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