Associations between Openness, Relationship Satisfaction, and Perceived Partner Unresponsiveness and Topic Avoidance: Moderating Effects of Dogmatism for Individuals in a Romantic Relationship

abstract: Individuals in a romantic relationship may avoid discussing certain topics with their partner, often to avoid relational and emotional risk. This strategy is known as topic avoidance and may be an important factor for individuals in turbulent romantic relationship to consider due to the im...

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Other Authors: Mikel, Lindsay (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.54823
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-54823
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-548232019-11-07T03:00:58Z Associations between Openness, Relationship Satisfaction, and Perceived Partner Unresponsiveness and Topic Avoidance: Moderating Effects of Dogmatism for Individuals in a Romantic Relationship abstract: Individuals in a romantic relationship may avoid discussing certain topics with their partner, often to avoid relational and emotional risk. This strategy is known as topic avoidance and may be an important factor for individuals in turbulent romantic relationship to consider due to the importance of communicating with a partner. The associations between characteristics such as openness, relationship satisfaction, and perceived partner unresponsiveness, and topic avoidance have not been directly studied within dogmatism literature. However, dogmatism, defined as a person’s relative openness (or closedness) to new information, may be an important construct associated with topic avoidance that strengthens the associations between perceived partner unresponsiveness, and topic avoidance, and weakens the association between openness, relationship satisfaction, and topic avoidance. Using data from 334 individuals in romantic relationships, results revealed that perceived partner unresponsiveness was positively associated with State of the Relationship, relationship satisfaction was positively associated with Conflict-Inducing and Negative Life Experiences, such that as scores on relationship satisfaction and perceived partner unresponsiveness increased, topic avoidance scores also increased. Openness was not associated with Topic Avoidance. Additionally, as predicted, dogmatism moderated the association between relationship satisfaction and State of the Relationship Topic Avoidance, the associations between perceived partner unresponsiveness and State of the Relationship Topic Avoidance and Negative Life Experiences Topic Avoidance. This research has important implications for clinicians working with individuals who present with relational concerns and exhibit dogmatic behavior. Limitations and future directions are discussed. Dissertation/Thesis Mikel, Lindsay (Author) Randall, Ashley K (Advisor) Bludworth, James (Committee member) Guerrero, Laura (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Communication Counseling psychology Behavioral sciences dogmatism openness relationship satisfaction romantic relationships topic avoidance eng 68 pages Masters Thesis Counseling 2019 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.54823 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2019
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Communication
Counseling psychology
Behavioral sciences
dogmatism
openness
relationship satisfaction
romantic relationships
topic avoidance
spellingShingle Communication
Counseling psychology
Behavioral sciences
dogmatism
openness
relationship satisfaction
romantic relationships
topic avoidance
Associations between Openness, Relationship Satisfaction, and Perceived Partner Unresponsiveness and Topic Avoidance: Moderating Effects of Dogmatism for Individuals in a Romantic Relationship
description abstract: Individuals in a romantic relationship may avoid discussing certain topics with their partner, often to avoid relational and emotional risk. This strategy is known as topic avoidance and may be an important factor for individuals in turbulent romantic relationship to consider due to the importance of communicating with a partner. The associations between characteristics such as openness, relationship satisfaction, and perceived partner unresponsiveness, and topic avoidance have not been directly studied within dogmatism literature. However, dogmatism, defined as a person’s relative openness (or closedness) to new information, may be an important construct associated with topic avoidance that strengthens the associations between perceived partner unresponsiveness, and topic avoidance, and weakens the association between openness, relationship satisfaction, and topic avoidance. Using data from 334 individuals in romantic relationships, results revealed that perceived partner unresponsiveness was positively associated with State of the Relationship, relationship satisfaction was positively associated with Conflict-Inducing and Negative Life Experiences, such that as scores on relationship satisfaction and perceived partner unresponsiveness increased, topic avoidance scores also increased. Openness was not associated with Topic Avoidance. Additionally, as predicted, dogmatism moderated the association between relationship satisfaction and State of the Relationship Topic Avoidance, the associations between perceived partner unresponsiveness and State of the Relationship Topic Avoidance and Negative Life Experiences Topic Avoidance. This research has important implications for clinicians working with individuals who present with relational concerns and exhibit dogmatic behavior. Limitations and future directions are discussed. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Counseling 2019
author2 Mikel, Lindsay (Author)
author_facet Mikel, Lindsay (Author)
title Associations between Openness, Relationship Satisfaction, and Perceived Partner Unresponsiveness and Topic Avoidance: Moderating Effects of Dogmatism for Individuals in a Romantic Relationship
title_short Associations between Openness, Relationship Satisfaction, and Perceived Partner Unresponsiveness and Topic Avoidance: Moderating Effects of Dogmatism for Individuals in a Romantic Relationship
title_full Associations between Openness, Relationship Satisfaction, and Perceived Partner Unresponsiveness and Topic Avoidance: Moderating Effects of Dogmatism for Individuals in a Romantic Relationship
title_fullStr Associations between Openness, Relationship Satisfaction, and Perceived Partner Unresponsiveness and Topic Avoidance: Moderating Effects of Dogmatism for Individuals in a Romantic Relationship
title_full_unstemmed Associations between Openness, Relationship Satisfaction, and Perceived Partner Unresponsiveness and Topic Avoidance: Moderating Effects of Dogmatism for Individuals in a Romantic Relationship
title_sort associations between openness, relationship satisfaction, and perceived partner unresponsiveness and topic avoidance: moderating effects of dogmatism for individuals in a romantic relationship
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.54823
_version_ 1719287541763407872