Antecedents and Consequences of Relationship Maintenance in Intimate Relationships

Relationship maintenance represents an important understudied relational construct. Three studies were conducted to examine the correlates of relationship maintenance across five factors: positivity, openness, assurances, social networks, and sharing tasks. Study one is a meta-analytic review of t...

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Main Author: Ogolsky, Brian Gabriel
Other Authors: Ridley, Carl A
Language:EN
Published: The University of Arizona. 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194218
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1942182015-10-23T04:40:45Z Antecedents and Consequences of Relationship Maintenance in Intimate Relationships Ogolsky, Brian Gabriel Ridley, Carl A Ridley, Carl A Cate, Rodney Curran, Melissa Sbarra, David relationship maintenance commitment relationships couples conflict communication Relationship maintenance represents an important understudied relational construct. Three studies were conducted to examine the correlates of relationship maintenance across five factors: positivity, openness, assurances, social networks, and sharing tasks. Study one is a meta-analytic review of the existing literature on relationship maintenance and its correlates. Studies two and three are empirical examinations of the predictors of and barriers to relationship maintenance enactment in same-sex couples using a variety of methodological and statistical approaches.Study one is a meta-analysis that focuses on synthesizing the existing literature on relationship maintenance and several relational outcomes including satisfaction, commitment, mutuality, liking, love, and relationship duration as well as gender differences in the enactment of maintenance behaviors. Results suggest that relationship maintenance and the first five correlates are positivity related and these effects are moderate to large in magnitude. Relationship duration was negatively related to three of the five relationship maintenance factors, positively related to social networks, and not related to sharing tasks. Additionally, women tend to perform slightly more maintenance behaviors than men.Study two examines the association between relationship maintenance and commitment using a cross-lagged, actor-partner interdependence model to assess the direction of this relationship among same-sex couples. A sample of 98 couples was measured over 14 days. Results show support for a causal pathway from commitment to relationship maintenance and do not support the opposite pathway. Support for this causal pathway was also demonstrated through the examination of cross-partner effects.Study three explores the potential barriers to relationship maintenance enactment. Daily conflict was examined as it predicts relationship maintenance behaviors and the moderational effects of constructive and destructive (demand-withdraw) communication styles were examined. Results illustrate a negative relationship between conflict and relationship maintenance suggesting that engaging in interpersonal conflict results in decreased relationship maintenance enactment. The detrimental influence of conflict was minimized, however, when couples utilized a constructive rather than destructive communication style. To the contrary, destructive communication styles enhanced the negative effects of conflict with the exception of the actor-demand, partner-withdraw pattern, which reduced the negative effect of conflict. 2007 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194218 659747142 2075 EN Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic relationship maintenance
commitment
relationships
couples
conflict
communication
spellingShingle relationship maintenance
commitment
relationships
couples
conflict
communication
Ogolsky, Brian Gabriel
Antecedents and Consequences of Relationship Maintenance in Intimate Relationships
description Relationship maintenance represents an important understudied relational construct. Three studies were conducted to examine the correlates of relationship maintenance across five factors: positivity, openness, assurances, social networks, and sharing tasks. Study one is a meta-analytic review of the existing literature on relationship maintenance and its correlates. Studies two and three are empirical examinations of the predictors of and barriers to relationship maintenance enactment in same-sex couples using a variety of methodological and statistical approaches.Study one is a meta-analysis that focuses on synthesizing the existing literature on relationship maintenance and several relational outcomes including satisfaction, commitment, mutuality, liking, love, and relationship duration as well as gender differences in the enactment of maintenance behaviors. Results suggest that relationship maintenance and the first five correlates are positivity related and these effects are moderate to large in magnitude. Relationship duration was negatively related to three of the five relationship maintenance factors, positively related to social networks, and not related to sharing tasks. Additionally, women tend to perform slightly more maintenance behaviors than men.Study two examines the association between relationship maintenance and commitment using a cross-lagged, actor-partner interdependence model to assess the direction of this relationship among same-sex couples. A sample of 98 couples was measured over 14 days. Results show support for a causal pathway from commitment to relationship maintenance and do not support the opposite pathway. Support for this causal pathway was also demonstrated through the examination of cross-partner effects.Study three explores the potential barriers to relationship maintenance enactment. Daily conflict was examined as it predicts relationship maintenance behaviors and the moderational effects of constructive and destructive (demand-withdraw) communication styles were examined. Results illustrate a negative relationship between conflict and relationship maintenance suggesting that engaging in interpersonal conflict results in decreased relationship maintenance enactment. The detrimental influence of conflict was minimized, however, when couples utilized a constructive rather than destructive communication style. To the contrary, destructive communication styles enhanced the negative effects of conflict with the exception of the actor-demand, partner-withdraw pattern, which reduced the negative effect of conflict.
author2 Ridley, Carl A
author_facet Ridley, Carl A
Ogolsky, Brian Gabriel
author Ogolsky, Brian Gabriel
author_sort Ogolsky, Brian Gabriel
title Antecedents and Consequences of Relationship Maintenance in Intimate Relationships
title_short Antecedents and Consequences of Relationship Maintenance in Intimate Relationships
title_full Antecedents and Consequences of Relationship Maintenance in Intimate Relationships
title_fullStr Antecedents and Consequences of Relationship Maintenance in Intimate Relationships
title_full_unstemmed Antecedents and Consequences of Relationship Maintenance in Intimate Relationships
title_sort antecedents and consequences of relationship maintenance in intimate relationships
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194218
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