Partner Responsiveness Mediates the Relationship Between Virtues and Partner Movement Toward Ideal Self

Extant literature suggests not only that social relationships are one context in which individuals may pursue personal strivings (Rusbult, Finkel & Kumashiro, 2009a), but also that individuals may assess their marital satisfaction based on their goal-striving successes (Li & Fung, 2011). Ind...

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Main Author: Cazzell, Amber Rachel
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/6269
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7269&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-72692019-05-16T03:04:07Z Partner Responsiveness Mediates the Relationship Between Virtues and Partner Movement Toward Ideal Self Cazzell, Amber Rachel Extant literature suggests not only that social relationships are one context in which individuals may pursue personal strivings (Rusbult, Finkel & Kumashiro, 2009a), but also that individuals may assess their marital satisfaction based on their goal-striving successes (Li & Fung, 2011). Indeed, the degree to which partners appear to be responsive to one another's goals and ideals, termed partner responsiveness, has been linked with personal and relational well-being (Reis, Clark & Holmes, 2004; Rusbult et al., 2009a). Virtues such as commitment, trust, and compassion have been theoretically and empirically associated with upward cycles of partner responsiveness and personal and relational well-being (Canavello & Crocker, 2010; Reis & Gable, 2015). Partner responsiveness has also been consistently linked with goal attainment and well-being in the context of social relationships (Drigotas, 2002). The present study sought to bridge these two literatures by examining the potential mediating role of partner responsiveness between virtues and goal attainment. Data for the present study came from a cross-sectional survey of 840 heterosexual married couples living across the United States. Hypotheses were analyzed using an actor-partner interdependencemodel (Kenny, Kashy & Cook, 2006). Results suggested that partner responsiveness partially mediated actor effects of virtue on goal attainment, but fully mediated the partner effects of virtue on goal attainment. Gender effects emerged such that the direct effects of virtues on goal attainment were stronger for husbands than for wives. These results indicate that within-dyads (Kenny et al., 2006) gender difference variables (e.g. percent of family income earned) are likely to account for these differences. Study limitations and suggestions for future research are discussed. 2017-03-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/6269 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7269&context=etd http://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ All Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive virtues partner responsiveness personal strivings Psychology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic virtues
partner responsiveness
personal strivings
Psychology
spellingShingle virtues
partner responsiveness
personal strivings
Psychology
Cazzell, Amber Rachel
Partner Responsiveness Mediates the Relationship Between Virtues and Partner Movement Toward Ideal Self
description Extant literature suggests not only that social relationships are one context in which individuals may pursue personal strivings (Rusbult, Finkel & Kumashiro, 2009a), but also that individuals may assess their marital satisfaction based on their goal-striving successes (Li & Fung, 2011). Indeed, the degree to which partners appear to be responsive to one another's goals and ideals, termed partner responsiveness, has been linked with personal and relational well-being (Reis, Clark & Holmes, 2004; Rusbult et al., 2009a). Virtues such as commitment, trust, and compassion have been theoretically and empirically associated with upward cycles of partner responsiveness and personal and relational well-being (Canavello & Crocker, 2010; Reis & Gable, 2015). Partner responsiveness has also been consistently linked with goal attainment and well-being in the context of social relationships (Drigotas, 2002). The present study sought to bridge these two literatures by examining the potential mediating role of partner responsiveness between virtues and goal attainment. Data for the present study came from a cross-sectional survey of 840 heterosexual married couples living across the United States. Hypotheses were analyzed using an actor-partner interdependencemodel (Kenny, Kashy & Cook, 2006). Results suggested that partner responsiveness partially mediated actor effects of virtue on goal attainment, but fully mediated the partner effects of virtue on goal attainment. Gender effects emerged such that the direct effects of virtues on goal attainment were stronger for husbands than for wives. These results indicate that within-dyads (Kenny et al., 2006) gender difference variables (e.g. percent of family income earned) are likely to account for these differences. Study limitations and suggestions for future research are discussed.
author Cazzell, Amber Rachel
author_facet Cazzell, Amber Rachel
author_sort Cazzell, Amber Rachel
title Partner Responsiveness Mediates the Relationship Between Virtues and Partner Movement Toward Ideal Self
title_short Partner Responsiveness Mediates the Relationship Between Virtues and Partner Movement Toward Ideal Self
title_full Partner Responsiveness Mediates the Relationship Between Virtues and Partner Movement Toward Ideal Self
title_fullStr Partner Responsiveness Mediates the Relationship Between Virtues and Partner Movement Toward Ideal Self
title_full_unstemmed Partner Responsiveness Mediates the Relationship Between Virtues and Partner Movement Toward Ideal Self
title_sort partner responsiveness mediates the relationship between virtues and partner movement toward ideal self
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2017
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/6269
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7269&context=etd
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