Close Relationships. Passionate love Must come into contact with someone who is an appropriate love object. –Role of chance.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Love & The Breakdown Of Relationships
Advertisements

Close Relationships Relationship formation, maintenance, and breakup
Attraction and Mate Selection
Chapter 14 Divorce and Remarriage
Working Models Self in relation to others.. Working Models  Primary assumption of attachment theory is that humans form close bonds in the interest of.
Attraction & Intimacy Liking & Loving Others. I. We need to belong or connect with others in enduring, close relationships. I. We need to belong or connect.
Chapter 11- Close Relationships: Passion, Intimacy, and Sexuality
The Journey Of Adulthood, 6/e Helen L. Bee & Barbara R. Bjorklund Chapter 6 SOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS.
Chapter 11: Relationships and Roles. The Changing Landscape of Marriage Throughout history: Marriage was often based on practical concerns. Mid twentieth.
Attraction and Intimacy: Liking and Loving Others
Attraction and Intimacy: Liking and Loving Others
Chapter 7: Love, Relationships, and Communication
LOVE. WOULD YOU MARRY A PERSON IF THEY HAD ALL THE ATTRBUTES YOU WANTED IN A MATE, BUT YOU DID NOT LOVE HIM?
Friendship and Support. Overview of Friendship Nature of Friendship Rules of Friendship Theories of Friendship Balance Theory Developmental Theory Theories.
Attachment – Lesson Three
Mate Selection Marital Happiness. Divorce Distribution by Length of Marriage 20 to 24 years of age.
Conflict and Violence. Is Conflict Good or Bad? Frequency of Conflict Depends on: Personality Similarity of Preferences Life Stage.
AGING IN FAMILIES. Longitudinal Study of Generations (LSG) Vern Bengtson, et USC ~300 3&4-generation families (2000 grandparents, parents,
Discuss the role of communication in maintaining relationships
19 - Emerging Adulthood Psychosocial Development
Chapter 9 - Attraction Part 3: Nov. 1, Attachment and Love Evolutionary approach –Our adult relationships based partly on our experiences as infants.
Close Relationships Relationship formation, maintenance, and breakup.
Interpersonal Attraction. Why do people form relationships with others? People are social animals who have a basic “need to belong” Newborns are responsive.
Chapter 9 - Attraction Part 4: Nov. 7, Theories of Love Passionate v Companionate Love –Companionate love: feelings of intimacy and affection not.
Psychological Development in Middle Adulthood. Marriage and family relations There are Five important aspects of middle aged life today: Relationships.
Developing Close Relationships © All photo clip art copyright of Microsoft Office Online.
Love and Communication in Intimate Relationships
Adult Years. Functions of marriage for society Inheritance rights Structured economic partnership Regulating sexual behavior Childrearing.
Interpersonal Attraction Chapter 10.  Much of the day-to-day meaning in life comes from them.  People feel lonely and alienated without them Why are.
Choosing to marry Chapter 8. The ability to give and receive love  The ability to give and receive love is vital  Willing to commit yourself to help.
Do Now……. In your notebook, write a couple of sentences explaining why relationships end.
The “Bridge” Study Misattribution of Emotional Arousal Tilted, swayed (6 ft.), wobbled Low handrails (3 feet) 230 foot drop to rocks and rapids.
Attachment Theory Adult Attachment Secure Comfortable in relationships Able to seek support from partner Dismissing Greater sense of autonomy Tend to cut.
Friendship, Love & Commitment
ATTRACTION AND CLOSE RELATIONSHIPS Chapter 9. Desire to establish and maintain social contact with other Need for Affiliation.
Chapter 12- Close Relationships: Passion, Intimacy, and Sexuality
1. Nest 2. Training 3. Happy Flying.
Grace White, B.S. Erika Lawrence, Ph.D University of Iowa.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education. All rights reserved. Interpersonal Attraction: From First Impressions to Close Relationships Chapter 10 “Try to reason.
Social Psychology The scientific study of the ways in which the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors of one individual are influenced by the real, imagined,
Some factors leading to initial attraction Proximity (more likely to form relationships with those who live near us, or that we interact with on a regular.
Interpersonal Attraction
End of Relationships.
Lecture Outline Components of Emotions Theories of Emotional Development Emotional Milestones Identifying Others’ Emotions and Understanding the Causes.
Adult Years © Robert J. Atkins, Ph.D.. What does marriage do for society? Inheritance rights Structured economic partnership Regulating sexual behavior.
Psychology 3051 Psychology 305A: Theories of Personality Lecture 13 1.
Activity 2: What Makes Couples Tick?. Overview In this activity you will learn about the factors influencing the decisions and behaviours in intimate.
Love and Well-Being Cicilia Evi GradDiplSc., M. Psi.
Sociology 1201 Marital separation and divorce Is marriage: 1. a voluntary contract that can be ended by either partner; 2. a lifetime commitment “til death.
CHAPTER 16 SOCIOEMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN MIDDLE ADULTHOOD.
Chapter 8 Committing to Each Other Love and Marriage? The Marriage Market Homogamy: Narrowing the Pool of Eligibles Courtship in a Free-Choice Society.
Glencoe Making Life Choices Section 2 How to Develop a Healthy Relationship Chapter 18 Dating, Commitment, and Marriage 1 > HOME Content.
Socioemotional Development in Middle Adulthood
Attachment style and condom use across and within dating relationships
Chapter 11: Attraction and Intimacy
Relationships and roles
Romantic Relationships THEORIES
Interpersonal Attraction
Social Development Standards 4ci-iv
Psychological origins of attraction
Research-Based Answers to Frequently Asked Questions About: Remarriage
Chapter 9 - Attraction Part 4: Nov. 3, 2010.
The influence of childhood on adult relationships
Topic 3: Interpersonal Relationship.
Chapter 9 - Attraction Part 3: Nov. 1, 2010.
Chapter 10: Intimate Relationships
Attachment Behaviors:
Attachment Monkey research of Harry Harlow
Love and Intimacy cont’d
Ch 11: Attraction & Intimacy
Presentation transcript:

Close Relationships

Passionate love Must come into contact with someone who is an appropriate love object. –Role of chance

Passionate love –Given a chance encounter, what increases the probability that you will fall in love? Role of arousal

Passionate love Two factor theory of passionate love (Hatfield & Berscheid) First, person must experience a general state of arousal Second, person must attribute this arousal to the potential partner

Passionate love Excitation transfer: The process whereby arousal caused by one stimulus (e.g., an anxiety provoking situation) is added to the arousal from a second stimulus (e.g., an attractive potential partner) and the combined arousal is attributed to the second stimulus (e.g., the potential partner)

Excitation transfer? Dutton & Aron (1974) Quasi-IV: Walked across a scary suspension bridge (high arousal) or a more standard bridge (low arousal) DV: Later calls or does not call the attractive female E Results: Men who had crossed the scary bridge were ___________to call the attractive female E than those who had crossed the standard bridge. Limitations?

Excitation transfer White et al (1981) study IV1: Men ran in place for 2 mins or 15 seconds (to create high/low arousal) IV2: Woman in video was attractive or unattractive DV: After watching video, men rated woman’s attractiveness. Results: Men in the _____________condition rated the attractive woman as ______attractive and the unattractive woman as ______ attractive than did men in the ____ arousal condition.

Passionate love usually cools over time. In U.S., initial honeymoon period is followed by a drop in satisfaction; continues to decline from 2-3 yrs; levels off around 4 yrs After 2 years of marriage, spouses express affection about half as often as when they were newlyweds.

Divorce rate Occurs most often within 7 yrs, with peak at 4-5 yrs. Second danger point about yrs into marriage (16.4 yrs.) -- when kids leave home, or midlife crisis.

May differ cross-culturally in arranged vs. love-based marriages. –Gupta & Singh (1982) study of 50 couples in India. Half in arranged marriages, half married for “love. –Results: Those who married for love reported ________feelings of love if they had been married more than five years. In contrast, those in arranged marriages reported ______love if they were not newlyweds.

Figure on overhead

Conflict and Communication in Long-term Romantic Relationships Conflict is common in romantic relationships.

Sometimes conflict arises from differing expectations.

Sometimes conflict arises because partners have different perceptions of the same events.

What is the trajectory of conflict in long-term stable relationships? –Classic study by Harriet Braiker and Harold Kelley (1979): 20 married couples provided accounts of their relationships, from casual dating, to serious dating, engagement, marriages, etc, and indicated degrees of love and conflict/negativity. Main point: Both love and conflict ________from casual to serious dating and _________at engagement and marriage.

What is the trajectory of conflict in relationships that breakup? –Sally Lloyd and Rodney Cate (1985) took an approach similar to Braiker & Kelley, but they looked at 49 men and 48 women who had been in serious romantic relationships ), but had broken up in the last twelve months. Main point: Both love and conflict ________from early to later stage of relationship, but as relationships moved into a state of uncertainty, conflict _______and love _______.

Figure -- overhead

Is conflict good or bad for a relationship? –It depends on how the people deal with the conflict! Good: Open communication, constructive problem- solving Bad: Negative affect reciprocity (a tit-for-tat exchange of expressions of negative feelings) and demand-withdraw pattern (one person wants to discuss a relationship problem, the other withdraws)

How might couples improve their relationships? John Gottman, at University of Washington. “Love Lab”) What kinds of measures do the researchers collect? What kinds of information do you think the researchers are using to estimate whether a couple is likely to divorce or remain together? What constructive behaviors (i.e., those that are probably good for the relationship) did you observe in these couples? What destructive behaviors (i.e., those that will likely harm the relationship) did you observe?

Video clip

Gottman claims that his assessments (in the “Love Lab”) allow him to predict with ________accuracy, which married couples are likely to remain in a stable relationship and which ones are likely to get divorced. Thought question: How well would you be able to predict married couples’ likelihood of divorce? On what would you base your prediction?

Main predictors of divorce Frequency of ________________ _______________________________. Contempt (e.g., rolling the eyes) = one of the ____________signals of _______ marital problems, especially combined with ______________.

Romantic love as an attachment relationship Hazan & Shaver, 1987 Romantic love relationships are similar, in many ways, to the attachment relationship observed between children and their parents

Adult Attachment Theory Infant-caregiver bond serves the function of helping infants to regulate distress –Sensitive & responsive caregivers help to calm the infant and to restore felt security Threatening situations trigger attachment behaviors –Threats can be physical or psychological Parallels between infant-caregiver relationship and adult romantic relationships (Hazan & Shaver, 1987) –Both types of relationships may serve this regulatory function

Attachment theory Normative processes – all people engage in these processes Individual differences –Different experiences shape mental representations (internal working models) of the self in relation to others

HIGH ANXIETY LOW ANXIETY HIGH AVOIDANCE LOW AVOIDANCE SECURE PREOCCUPIED (anxious-ambivalent) DISMISSING- AVOIDANT FEARFUL- AVOIDANT