دورية أكاديمية

Feeling loved as a strong link in relationship interactions: Partners who feel loved may buffer destructive behavior by actors who feel unloved.

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Feeling loved as a strong link in relationship interactions: Partners who feel loved may buffer destructive behavior by actors who feel unloved.
المؤلفون: Sasaki E; School of Psychology, University of Auckland., Overall NC; School of Psychology, University of Auckland., Reis HT; Department of Clinical and Social Sciences in Psychology, University of Rochester., Righetti F; Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam., Chang VT; School of Psychology, University of Auckland., Low RST; School of Psychology, Victoria University of Wellington., Henderson AME; School of Psychology, University of Auckland., McRae CS; School of Psychology, University of Auckland., Cross EJ; Department of Psychology, University of Essex., Jayamaha SD; School of Psychology, University of Auckland., Maniaci MR; Department of Psychology, Florida Atlantic University., Reid CJ; School of Psychology, University of Auckland.
المصدر: Journal of personality and social psychology [J Pers Soc Psychol] 2023 Aug; Vol. 125 (2), pp. 367-396. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Feb 27.
نوع المنشور: Journal Article
اللغة: English
بيانات الدورية: Publisher: American Psychological Association Country of Publication: United States NLM ID: 0014171 Publication Model: Print-Electronic Cited Medium: Internet ISSN: 1939-1315 (Electronic) Linking ISSN: 00223514 NLM ISO Abbreviation: J Pers Soc Psychol Subsets: MEDLINE
أسماء مطبوعة: Publication: Washington Dc : American Psychological Association
Original Publication: Washington, American Psychological Assn.
مواضيع طبية MeSH: Interpersonal Relations* , Emotions*, Child ; Humans ; Hostility ; Sexual Partners
مستخلص: Feeling loved (loved, cared for, accepted, valued, understood) is inherently dyadic, yet most prior theoretical perspectives and investigations have focused on how actors feeling (un)loved shapes actors' outcomes. Adopting a dyadic perspective, the present research tested whether the established links between actors feeling unloved and destructive (critical, hostile) behavior depended on partners' feelings of being loved. Does feeling loved need to be mutual to reduce destructive behavior, or can partners feeling loved compensate for actors feeling unloved? In five dyadic observational studies, couples were recorded discussing conflicts, diverging preferences or relationship strengths, or interacting with their child (total N = 842 couples; 1,965 interactions). Participants reported how much they felt loved during each interaction and independent coders rated how much each person exhibited destructive behavior. Significant Actors' × Partners' Felt-Loved interactions revealed a strong-link/mutual felt-unloved pattern: partners' high felt-loved buffered the damaging effect of actors' low felt-loved on destructive behavior, resulting in actors' destructive behavior mostly occurring when both actors' and partners' felt-loved was low. This dyadic pattern also emerged in three supplemental daily sampling studies. Providing directional support for the strong-link/mutual felt-unloved pattern, in Studies 4 and 5 involving two or more sequential interactions, Actors' × Partners' Felt-Loved in one interaction predicted actors' destructive behavior within couples' subsequent conflict interactions. The results illustrate the dyadic nature of feeling loved: Partners feeling loved can protect against actors feeling unloved in challenging interactions. Assessing Actor × Partner effects should be equally valuable for advancing understanding of other fundamentally dyadic relationship processes. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
معلومات مُعتمدة: John Templeton Foundation; Royal Society of New Zealand (RSNZ); Fetzer Institute; Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research
تواريخ الأحداث: Date Created: 20230227 Date Completed: 20230710 Latest Revision: 20230718
رمز التحديث: 20230718
DOI: 10.1037/pspi0000419
PMID: 36848105
قاعدة البيانات: MEDLINE
الوصف
تدمد:1939-1315
DOI:10.1037/pspi0000419