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Journals Journal of Social and Personal...

Journal of Social and Personal Relationships

https://read.qxmd.com/read/37426834/associations-among-financial-well-being-daily-relationship-tension-and-daily-affect-in-two-adult-cohorts-separated-by-the-great-recession
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
August I C Jenkins, Yunying Le, Agus Surachman, David M Almeida, Steffany J Fredman
Financial well-being may be an important context for daily emotional reactivity to relationship tension (e.g., arguments) whose salience varies across historical time or as a function of exposure to economic downturns. This study investigated how emotional reactivity, operationalized as daily fluctuations in negative and positive affect associated with the occurrence of daily relationship tension, varied by financial well-being among those who were and were not exposed to the Great Recession of 2008. Two matched, independent subsamples of partnered individuals from the National Study of Daily Experiences completed identical 8-day diary protocols, one before the Great Recession ( n = 587) and one after ( n = 351)...
April 2023: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37122443/positive-illusions-about-dyadic-perspective-taking-as-a-moderator-of-the-association-between-attachment-insecurity-and-marital-satisfaction
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Richard A Rigby, Rebecca J Cobb
Attachment insecurity (i.e., attachment anxiety or avoidance) puts people at risk for dissatisfying relationships. However, the dyadic regulation model of insecurity buffering suggests that an understanding and responsive partner may help insecure individuals to regulate emotions, thus improving couples' relationships. It may also be that perceiving partners as understanding and empathic, especially in an exaggeratedly positive way (i.e., positive illusions) will buffer insecurity. In 196 mixed-gender newlywed couples, we investigated whether spouses' positive illusions about partner's dyadic perspective-taking moderated the association between spouses' attachment insecurity and spouses' and partners' marital satisfaction over two years...
April 2023: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37200941/relationship-maintenance-among-military-couples
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leanne K Knobloch, J Kale Monk, Shelley M MacDermid Wadsworth
A burgeoning body of research on the relationship maintenance of military couples over the past two decades suggests the time is right to organize, assimilate, and critique the literature. We conducted a systematic review informed by the integrative model of relationship maintenance (Ogolsky et al., 2017) that considered issues of intersectionality (Crenshaw, 1991). Our literature search identified 81 relevant journal articles representing 62 unique samples. With respect to theory, 59.3% of the journal articles employed one or more formal theoretical frameworks...
March 2023: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37063346/affective-reactions-to-daily-interpersonal-stressors-moderation-by-family-involvement-and-gender
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dakota D Witzel, Kelly D Chandler, Robert S Stawski
The goal of this study was to examine whether family involvement and gender moderated daily changes in affect associated with interpersonal stressors. Adults ( N = 2022; M age = 56.25, Median = 56, SD = 12.20, Range = 33-84) from the second wave of the National Study of Daily Experiences participated in eight consecutive daily diaries. Each day they reported whether a daily interpersonal stressor occurred, whether family was involved, and their positive and negative affect. Results from multilevel models indicated that family involvement did not significantly moderate daily interpersonal stressor-affect associations; however, gender was a significant moderator in some instances...
March 2023: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38603371/a-descriptive-literature-review-of-early-research-on-covid-19-and-close-relationships
#25
REVIEW
Jennifer L Bevan, Madison K Murphy, Pamela J Lannutti, Richard B Slatcher, Rhonda N Balzarini
This in-depth critical review investigates the impact of COVID-19 on personal relationships from the start of the pandemic in early 2020 to September 2021. Research examining six themes are identified and described in detail: the impact of COVID-19 on (1) family and intimate relationships; (2) LGBTQ+ relationships; (3) how COVID-19 is linked to technologically mediated communication and personal relationships; (4) potential shifts in sexual behaviors and desire; (5) potential shifts in relational conflict and intimate partner violence; and (6) constructive aspects of personal relationships, which is a broad theme that includes outcomes such as resilience, relational quality, coping, and social support...
February 2023: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38603320/workers-individual-and-dyadic-coping-with-the-covid-19-health-emergency-a-cross-cultural-study
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Silvia Donato, Agostino Brugnera, Roberta Adorni, Sara Molgora, Eleonora Reverberi, Claudia Manzi, Maria Angeli, Anna Bagirova, Veronica Benet-Martinez, Liberato Camilleri, Frances Camilleri-Cassar, Evi Hatzivarnava Kazasi, Gerardo Meil, Maria Symeonaki, Ayça Aksu, Karina Batthyany, Ruta Brazienė, Natalia Genta, Annick Masselot, Suzy Morrissey
The aim of this study was to examine workers' psychological distress during the COVID-19 pandemic as a function of their individual coping, dyadic coping, and work-family conflict. We also tested the moderating role of gender and culture in these associations. To achieve this aim, we run HLM analyses on data from 1521 workers cohabiting with a partner, coming from six countries (Italy, Spain, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, and Russia) characterized by various degrees of country-level individualism/collectivism. Across all six countries, findings highlighted that work-family conflict as well as the individual coping strategy social support seeking were associated with higher psychological distress for workers, while the individual coping strategy positive attitude and common dyadic coping were found to be protective against workers' psychological distress...
February 2023: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38603251/impact-of-the-covid-19-pandemic-on-canadian-social-connections-a-thematic-analysis
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Catherine Lowe, Maliha Rafiq, Lyndsay Jerusha MacKay, Nicole Letourneau, Cheuk Fan Ng, Janine Keown-Gerrard, Trevor Gilbert, Kharah M Ross
BACKGROUND: On March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a worldwide pandemic. Responses to the pandemic response disrupted Canadian social connections in complex ways; because social connections are determinants of health and well-being, their disruption could adversely affect health and well-being. Moreover, understanding how pandemics and public health responses affect social connections could inform pandemic recovery strategy and public health approaches designed for future pandemics...
February 2023: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38603232/prepandemic-relationship-satisfaction-is-related-to-postpandemic-covid-19-anxiety-a-four-wave-study-in-china
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jingyi Ou, Hanqi Yun, Ke Zhang, Yuexiao Du, Yihang He, Yinan Wang
The COVID-19 pandemic has had lasting impacts on people's interpersonal relationship and mental health. Using four-wave data in China ( N = 222, 54.50% female, M age = 31.53, SD = 8.17), the current study examined whether prepandemic relationship satisfaction was related to postpandemic COVID-19 anxiety through midpandemic perceived social support and/or gratitude. The results showed that people's COVID-19 anxiety decreased from the peak to the trough stage of the pandemic; perceived social support increased markedly from prepandemic to the peak and remained stable subsequently, while relationship satisfaction remained unchanged throughout...
February 2023: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37304834/the-moderating-role-of-neighborhood-social-cohesion-on-the-relationship-between-early-mother-child-attachment-security-and-adolescent-social-skills-brief-report
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sunghyun Hong, Felicia Hardi, Kathryn Maguire-Jack
BACKGROUND: Social skill is a critical asset for adolescents, and early mother-child attachment is an essential contributor to their development. While less secure mother-child attachment is a known risk factor for adolescent social development, the protective factor of neighborhood context in buffering this risk is still not well understood. RESEARCH DESIGN: This study used longitudinal data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study ( n = 1,876). Adolescent social skills (at age 15) were examined as a function of early attachment security and neighborhood social cohesion (age 3)...
February 2023: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36844897/respiratory-sinus-arrhythmia-moderates-the-interpersonal-consequences-of-brooding-rumination
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Warren Caldwell, Sasha MacNeil, Carsten Wrosch, Jennifer J McGrath, Thanh T Dang-Vu, Alexandre J S Morin, Jean-Philippe Gouin
Brooding rumination is an intrapersonal emotion regulation strategy associated with negative interpersonal consequences. Resting respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), a psychophysiological marker of self-regulatory capacity, may buffer the association between maladaptive emotion regulation and negative interpersonal behaviors. The current work examines the moderating effect of RSA on the association between brooding rumination and different negative interpersonal consequences. Across three convenience samples, individuals with lower RSA showed a stronger association between brooding rumination and more negative interpersonal behaviors as well as less perception of received instrumental social support (Study 1; n = 154), higher levels of interviewer-rated interpersonal stress (Study 2; n = 42) and a stronger indirect association between brooding rumination and depressive symptoms via daily interpersonal stress (Study 3; n = 222)...
February 2023: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36844896/modeling-social-interaction-dynamics-measured-with-smartphone-sensors-an-ambulatory-assessment-study-on-social-interactions-and-loneliness
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Timon Elmer, Gerine Lodder
More and more data are being collected using combined active (e.g., surveys) and passive (e.g., smartphone sensors) ambulatory assessment methods. Fine-grained temporal data, such as smartphone sensor data, allow gaining new insights into the dynamics of social interactions in day-to-day life and how these are associated with psychosocial phenomena - such as loneliness. So far, however, smartphone sensor data have often been aggregated over time, thus, not doing justice to the fine-grained temporality of these data...
February 2023: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38603263/determinants-of-loneliness-during-the-covid-19-pandemic-in-the-united-states-a-one-year-follow-up-study
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Colter D Ray, Samantha J Shebib
An initial study on loneliness during the first month of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States found that those who were living alone or who were single experienced greater loneliness than those who lived with others or were in a romantic relationship. This study presents follow-up analyses using data collected from the same sample ( N = 428) at a total of five points in time throughout the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States. Unlike most studies using a longitudinal design to track loneliness throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, the results of this study showed that loneliness scores generally decreased over this time period...
December 2022: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37578210/covid-19-distress-and-interdependence-of-daily-emotional-intimacy-physical-intimacy-and-loneliness-in-cohabiting-couples
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Talea Cornelius, Ana DiGiovanni, Allie W Scott, Niall Bolger
INTRODUCTION: COVID-19 has had a profound impact on relationship functioning, though effects have been heterogeneous. Reasons for divergent effects on relationship functioning remain unclear. Theoretical models suggest that it is not just stress exposure that leads to adverse relationships outcomes, but also subjective response to these stressors. Using data from a 14-day intensive longitudinal study of romantic dyads, we hypothesized that COVID-19-related distress would adversely impact one's own and one's partner's report of relationship functioning, on average...
December 2022: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36398166/why-do-you-have-sex-and-does-it-make-you-feel-better-integrating-attachment-theory-sexual-motives-and-sexual-well-being-in-long-term-couples
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Noémie Beaulieu, Audrey Brassard, Sophie Bergeron, Katherine Péloquin
Attachment theory postulates that three behavioral systems are central to optimal couple functioning: attachment, caregiving, and sex. However, few studies have examined the concurrent contribution of these systems to understand sexual well-being. This daily diary study examined the intermediary role of attachment- and caregiving-related sexual motives in the associations linking attachment insecurities and positive and negative emotions during sexual activity in 149 long-term mixed-gender/sex couples. Multilevel analyses revealed that individuals higher in attachment avoidance endorsed less caregiving sexual motives, which was associated with their own more negative emotional experience during sexual activity...
December 2022: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36398165/evidence-of-assortative-mating-for-theory-of-mind-via-facial-expressions-but-not-language
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily Jackson, John Galvin, Varun Warrier, Simon Baron-Cohen, Shanhong Luo, Robin Im Dunbar, Hannah Proctor, Eva Lee, Gareth Richards
Assortative mating is a phenomenon in which romantic partners typically resemble each other at a level greater than chance. There is converging evidence that social behaviours are subject to assortative mating, though less is known regarding social cognition. Social functioning requires the ability to identify and understand the mental states of others, i.e., theory of mind. The present study recruited a sample of 102 heterosexual couples via an online survey to test if theory of mind as measured using facial expressions (Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test) or language (Stiller-Dunbar Stories Task) is associated with assortative mating...
December 2022: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38603356/the-impact-of-covid-19-related-anti-asian-discrimination-on-sexual-communication-and-relationships-among-asian-individuals-in-the-united-states
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yachao Li, Jennifer A Samp
Asian individuals in the United States have experienced heightened racial discrimination during the COVID-19 pandemic, which may reduce positive relationship processes and damage intimate relationships, including their sexual behaviors and quality. Guided by the chilling effect and Interpersonal Exchange Model of Sexual Satisfaction, this study explores how COVID-19-related anti-Asian discrimination moderates the relationships between sexual relationship power, sexual self-disclosure, and sexual satisfaction...
November 2022: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38603302/risk-and-resilience-in-couple-s-adjustment-to-the-covid-19-pandemic
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ellen Xiang, Xiaotao Zhang, Syed A Raza, Abiodun Oluyomi, Christopher I Amos, Hoda Badr
The COVID-19 pandemic's global scope and resulting social distancing measures have caused unprecedented economic, lifestyle, and social impacts to personal and relationship well-being. While lockdowns have prompted individuals to increase reliance on intimate partners for support, stressful external contexts can also interfere with partners' capacity to request and provide support, resulting in relationship dissatisfaction and even dissolution. Guided by a risk and resilience framework, this study examined the impact of perceived stress, social contextual factors, and dyadic coping on self-reported relationship satisfaction changes during the initial United States COVID-19 lockdown period...
November 2022: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38603129/dynamic-associations-between-stress-and-relationship-functioning-in-the-wake-of-covid-19-longitudinal-data-from-the-german-family-panel-pairfam
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Theresa Pauly, Janina Lüscher, Corina Berli, Urte Scholz
Individuals all across the world experienced significant disruptions in their personal and family life with the outbreak of the new coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The current study investigated dynamic associations between stress and relationship functioning over time in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic. Perceived stress, relationship satisfaction, and relationship quality (appreciation, intimacy, conflict) were reported by 1483 young to middle-aged participants who were in a romantic relationship and lived with their partner in 2018/2019 and in May-July 2020 (a few months after the onset of COVID-19)...
November 2022: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36438854/enduring-covid-19-lockdowns-risk-versus-resilience-in-parents-health-and-family-functioning-across-the-pandemic
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nickola C Overall, Rachel S T Low, Valerie T Chang, Annette M E Henderson, Caitlin S McRae, Paula R Pietromonaco
Have the demands of the COVID-19 pandemic risked declines in parents' health and family functioning, or have most parents been resilient and shown no changes in health and family functioning? Assessing average risk versus resilience requires examining how families have fared across the pandemic, beyond the initial months examined in prior investigations. The current research examines changes in parents' health and functioning over the first 1.5 years of the pandemic. Parents ( N = 272) who had completed general pre-pandemic assessments completed reassessments of psychological/physical health, couple/family functioning, and parenting within two mandatory lockdowns in New Zealand: at the beginning of the pandemic (26 March-28 April 2020) and 17 months later (18 August-21 September 2021)...
November 2022: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36349312/relationship-difficulties-and-technoference-during-the-covid-19-pandemic
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Giulia Zoppolat, Francesca Righetti, Rhonda N Balzarini, María Alonso-Ferres, Betul Urganci, David L Rodrigues, Anik Debrot, Juthatip Wiwattanapantuwong, Christoffer Dharma, Peilian Chi, Johan C Karremans, Dominik Schoebi, Richard B Slatcher
The COVID-19 pandemic has touched many aspects of people's lives around the world, including their romantic relationships. While media outlets have reported that the pandemic is difficult for couples, empirical evidence is needed to test these claims and understand why this may be. In two highly powered studies ( N = 3271) using repeated measure and longitudinal approaches, we found that people who experienced COVID-19 related challenges (i.e., lockdown, reduced face-to-face interactions, boredom, or worry) also reported greater self and partner phone use (Study 1) and time spent on social media (Study 2), and subsequently experienced more conflict and less satisfaction in their romantic relationship...
November 2022: Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
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