A screenshot of the OKCupid website.

A screenshot of the OKCupid website.

OKCupid, the dating site owned by billionaire Barry Diller's IAC/InterActiveCorp, is the latest Internet company to say it conducts psychological studies on users.

OKCupid ran tests including analysis of the depth of conversations while users' pictures were removed for seven hours, co-founder Christian Rudder wrote in a blog post Monday. The website also temporarily changed its profile-rating system and suggested dating matches to people with low-compatibility scores to see if perception would change, he wrote.

The disclosure follows an onslaught of complaints against Facebook Inc., which disclosed in June that experiments were conducted in 2012 to influence what users saw on their news feeds without getting permission. While the move incited concern about privacy issues, Rudder said these types of tests are needed for websites to improve their products.

"Guess what, everybody? If you use the Internet, you're the subject of hundreds of experiments at any given time, on every site," Rudder wrote. "That's how websites work."

Rudder's post, titled We Experiment on Human Beings!, said the testing revealed consumer behavior, such as showing that a profile's text is less than 10 percent of what people consider when rating profiles -- it's all about the picture.

In the experiment in which Manhattan-based OKCupid displayed different compatibility scores than what its algorithm measured, he said the users were notified of the correct match score after the test.

Facebook's temporary influencing of what almost 700,000 readers saw on their news feeds in January 2012 prompted a digital-privacy group to file a complaint with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.

Pfc. Raheen Tyson Heighter, of Bay Shore, was killed in Operation Iraqi Freedom. His mother has made it her mission to aid active-duty service members, veterans, first responders and Gold Star families. NewsdayTV's Virginia Huie reports. Credit: Randee Daddona; Photo credit: Cathy Heighter

'His sacrifice made a difference': Gold Star mother honors son's memory Army Pfc. Raheen Tyson Heighter, 22, of Bay Shore, was the first serviceman from Long Island killed in the Iraq War.

Pfc. Raheen Tyson Heighter, of Bay Shore, was killed in Operation Iraqi Freedom. His mother has made it her mission to aid active-duty service members, veterans, first responders and Gold Star families. NewsdayTV's Virginia Huie reports. Credit: Randee Daddona; Photo credit: Cathy Heighter

'His sacrifice made a difference': Gold Star mother honors son's memory Army Pfc. Raheen Tyson Heighter, 22, of Bay Shore, was the first serviceman from Long Island killed in the Iraq War.

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