Tipsheet for Valentine's Day: New research in
relationship science
In time for
Valentine's Day, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin is
featuring several new studies all about relationships – including
the link between income in marriage and health, the role of jealousy
in becoming a parent, and how humor affects romantic couples in
conflict.
Journals: Being the breadwinner has health costs
Journals: Reducing violence in relationships through belief in growth
Journals: Jealousy drives down desire for children
Journals: Humor in relationships: Choose carefully
Journals: Singles feel singled out
Other relationship experts
New in the journals-
Being the breadwinner has health
costs
Men whose wives earn more income are
more likely to use erectile dysfunction medication than those who
outearn their wives, even when the inequality is small, according to
a new study. Researchers looking at more than 200,000 married couples
in Denmark from 1997 to 2006 also found that wives who outearned
their husbands were more likely to suffer from insomnia and to use
anti-anxiety medication. They did not find these effects for
unmarried couples or for men earning less than their wives prior to
marriage. "In
Sickness and in Wealth: Psychological and Sexual Costs of Income
Comparison in Marriage,” Personality and Social Psychology
Bulletin, Lamar Pierce (pierce@wustl.edu) et al., published
online February 3, 2013 – forthcoming in print March 2013.
Reducing violence in relationships
through belief in growth
Some studies indicate that more than
one-fifth of couples experience at least one episode of violence over
the course of a year. But when people belive that their relationship
can change and grow over time, they are less like likely to engage in
violent behavior toward one another, new research finds. In four
studies that examine more than 2,500 people, researchers found that
such so-called "growth beliefs” reduce violence in relationships
by increasing the satisfaction that partners have with sacrificing
their interests for their partners'. "Implicit
Theories of Relationships and Close Relationship Violence: Does
Believing Your Relationship Can Grow Relate to Lower Perpetration of
Violence?”, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin,
Rebecca Cobb (rebecca.a.cobb@gmail.com), et al., published online
January 31, 2013 – forthcoming in print March 2013.
Jealousy drives down desire for
children
Jealousy can play a powerful role in
men's and women's desire to have children. A suite of three new
studies found that when asked to remember a time that they
experienced jealousy, chronically jealous men and women reported
feeling less happy about the prospect of receiving news about being
pregnant and exhibited less interest in babies. They also found that
chronically jealous men – but not women – who were primed to
think about jealousy showed less interest in investing in their
children. "(Not)
Bringing up Baby: The Effects of Jealousy on the Desire to Have and
Invest in Children,” Personality and Social Psychology
Bulletin, Sarah Hill (s.e.hill@tcu.edu) and Danielle J.
DelPriore, published in February 2013.
Humor in relationships: Choose carefully
Humor can help diffuse tense conflicts in relationships – but the type of humor can make all the difference, found a new study. Studying 93 dating couples who were videotaped while trying to resolve a conflict, researchers found, for example, that highly anxious individuals tended to use more self-defeating humor, which elicited negative responses from highly distressed partners. Humor that was "affiliative” – positive but not at one's own expense – however, resounded well with such distressed partners. "It’s in the Way that You Use it: Attachment and the Dyadic Nature of Humor during Conflict Negotiation in Romantic Couples,” Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Heike Winterheld (heike.winterheld@csueastbay.edu) et al., forthcoming online in February 2013 and in print in April 2013.
Singles feeling singled out
"How come a wonderful person like you is still single?” How we frame such questions about differences between groups of people makes a big difference in how members of each group feel about their self-esteem. In two experiments, single participants felt worse about being single when they read or wrote about how singles differed from people in relationships than when they read or wrote about how couples differ from single people. "Singled Out as the Effect to be Explained: Implications for Collective Self-Esteem,”Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Susanne Bruckmüller (S.Bruckmuller@exeter.ac.uk), published in February 2013.
Other relationship experts-
Eli Finkel of Northwestern University, who recently published a
study showing how a minimal writing intervention exercise – 21
minutes a year – can preserve marital quality over time, and who
also recently presented work about testosterone levels in speed
dating.
Contact:
finkel@northwestern.edu
(847) 491-3212
Juwon Lee of the University of Kansas, who recently
presented work on how increased disclosure of personal
information on Facebook reduces satisfaction and intimacy among
couples.
Contact:
lee@ku.edu
Many
other relationship science experts are available – on evolutionary
aspects of love and mating, on newlyweds, breakups, and more. Contact
Lisa Munoz if you need other experts: spsp.publicaffairs@gmail.com
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