334 research outputs found
Northwestern NSF1
This is a longitudinal study of 75 dating couples from Northwestern University. All couples attended a laboratory session at study entry (Wave 0), and then completed follow-up surveys online every month for the next six months (Waves 1-6).
The intake session involves three sets of procedures: (1) completing surveys (participants also completed an online survey before attending the intake session); (2) completing computerized "implicit cognition" tasks, such as a Stroop task and AMP and IAT tasks relevant to physical aggression; and (3) videorecorded discussions with their partner, such as a standard conflict discussion and a self-change discussion
Northwestern NSF2
This is a longitudinal study of 120 married couples from the community surrounding Northwestern University (especially Evanston and Chicago, IL). All couples attended a laboratory session at study entry (Wave 0), and then completed follow-up surveys online every four months for the next two years (Waves 1-6).
The intake session involved three sets of procedures: (1) completing surveys (participants also completed an online survey before attending the intake session); (2) completing computerized "implicit cognition" tasks, such as a Stroop task and AMP and IAT tasks relevant to physical aggression; and (3) videorecorded discussions with their partner, such as a standard conflict discussion and a self-change discussion
The war of the roses: an interdependence analysis of betrayal and forgiveness
Part I. The Effect of Cognition on Interaction Patterns: Introduction to Part 1; 1. Thought and action: connecting attributions to behaviours in married couples’ interactions Valerie Manusov; 2. Self-evaluation motives in close relationships: a model of global enhancement and specific verification Lisa A. Neff and Benjamin R. Karney; 3. Competition in romantic relationships: do partners build niches? Steven R. H. Beach, Daniel Whitaker, Heather A. O’Mahen, Deborah Jones, Abraham Tesser and Frank Fincham; 4. Cognition and communication during marital conflict: how alcohol affects subjective coding of interaction in aggressive and non-aggressive couples Alan Sillars, Kenneth E. Leonard, Linda J. Roberts and Tim Dun; Part II. Understanding the Importance of Positive Interaction: Introduction to Part 2; 5. Observational ‘windows’ to intimacy processes in marriage Linda J. Roberts and Danielle R. Greenberg; 6. Bases for giving benefits in marriage: what is ideal? what is realistic? what really happens? Margaret S. Clark, Steve Graham and Nancy Grote; 7. Shared participation in self-expanding activities: positive effects on experienced marital quality Arthur Aron, Christine C. Norman, Elaine N. Aron and Gary Lewandowski; Part III. Coping with Disappointment, Criticism and Betrayal: Introduction to Part 3; 8. Coping with disappointments in marriage: when partners’ standards are unmet Anita L. Vangelisti and Alicia L. Alexander; 9. On empathic accuracy and husbands’ abusiveness: the ‘overattribution bias’ William E. Schweinle and William Ickes; 10. The war of the roses: an interdependence analysis of betrayal and forgiveness Caryl E. Rusbult, Madoka Kumashiro, Eli J. Finkel and Tim Wildschut; Part IV. Power, Conflict and Violence in Marital Interaction: Introduction to Part 4; 11. Demand-withdraw communication during couple conflict: a review and analysis Kathleen A. Eldridge and Andrew Christensen; 12. Approaches to the study of power in violent and nonviolent marriages, and in gay male and lesbian cohabiting relationships John Gottman, Janice Driver, Dan Yoshimoto and Regina Rushe; 13. The communication of couples in violent and nonviolent relationships: temporal associations with own and partners’ anxiety/arousal and behavior Patricia Noller and Nigel Roberts; Part V. Marital Interaction at Important Transition Periods: Introduction to Part 5; 14. Adult attachment, the transition to parenthood, and marital well-being Jeffry A. Simpson, W. Steven Rholes, Lorne Campbell, Carol Wilson and Sisi Tran; 15. Allocation and performance of household tasks: a comparison of new parents and childless couples Judith A. Feeney and Patricia Noller; 16. Caregiving and its influence on marital interactions between older spouses Helen Edwards and Patricia Noller; Part VI. Interventions for Strengthening Relationships: Introduction to Part 6; 17. Risk factors, risk processes, and the longitudinal course of newlywed marriage Lisa B. Story, Alexia D. Rothman and Thomas N. Bradbury; Does working at a relationship work? relationship self-regulation and relationship outcomes W. Kim Halford, Keithia L. Wilson, Alf Lizzio and Elizabeth Moor
emery_online_appendix – Supplemental material for You Can’t See the Real Me: Attachment Avoidance, Self-Verification, and Self-Concept Clarity
Supplemental material, emery_online_appendix for You Can’t See the Real Me: Attachment Avoidance, Self-Verification, and Self-Concept Clarity by Lydia F. Emery, Wendi L. Gardner, Kathleen L. Carswell, and Eli J. Finkel in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin</p
Avoidance_SCC_Supplementals_R3 – Supplemental material for You Can’t See the Real Me: Attachment Avoidance, Self-Verification, and Self-Concept Clarity
Supplemental material, Avoidance_SCC_Supplementals_R3 for You Can’t See the Real Me: Attachment Avoidance, Self-Verification, and Self-Concept Clarity by Lydia F. Emery, Wendi L. Gardner, Kathleen L. Carswell, and Eli J. Finkel in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin</p
The Stranger in the Woods
An excerpt from Michael Finkel\u27s book, The Stranger in the Woods: the Extraordinary Story of the Last True Hermit, is featured, along with an interview of the author. Finkel\u27s book is the story of Christopher Knight, locally know at the North Pond Hermit, who lived alone in the woods for 27 years until he was apprehended by police for robbery charges. [illustration, images
Psychological Science-2013-Finkel-0956797612474938-1.pdf
Abstract Marital quality is a major contributor to happiness and health. Unfortunately, marital quality normatively declines over time. We tested whether a novel 21-min intervention designed to foster the reappraisal of marital conflicts could preserve marital quality in a sample of 120 couples enrolled in an intensive 2-year study. Half of the couples were randomly assigned to receive the reappraisal intervention in Year 2 (following no intervention in Year 1); half were not. Both groups exhibited declines in marital quality over Year 1. This decline continued in Year 2 among couples in the control condition, but it was eliminated among couples in the reappraisal condition. This effect of the reappraisal intervention on marital quality over time was mediated through reductions in conflict-related distress over time. This study illustrates the potential of brief, theory-based, social-psychological interventions to preserve the quality of intimate relationships over time
Political Sectarianism: Construct and Scale Development
We are working to develop a measure of the construct of political sectarianism (Finkel et al., 2020). We recruited a sample of participants to assess the psychometric properties of this measure. To date, we have not explored any associations of this measure with other constructs assessed in the study; we are filing this preregistration in advance of those analyses
sj-pdf-1-erp-10.1177_08902070221085877 - Supplemental Material for Predicting romantic interest during early relationship development: A preregistered investigation using machine learning
Supplemental Material, sj-pdf-1-erp-10.1177_08902070221085877 for Predicting romantic interest during early relationship development: A preregistered investigation using machine learning by Paul W Eastwick, Samantha Joel, Kathleen L Carswell, Daniel C Molden, Eli J Finkel and Shelley A Blozis in European Journal of Personality</p
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