Adult attachment, social comparison, romantic relationship experience, and well-being

A review of the adult attachment literature revealed previous research findings to demonstrate attachment-based baseline differences in the well-being factor of life satisfaction but not to consider moderating factors nor fluctuations in life satisfaction experience. Furthermore, social cognitive pr...

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Main Author: Johnson, Kimberly Robyn
Other Authors: Holmes, Bjarne; North, Adrian
Published: Heriot-Watt University 2012
Subjects:
570
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575296
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5752962015-12-03T03:48:44ZAdult attachment, social comparison, romantic relationship experience, and well-beingJohnson, Kimberly RobynHolmes, Bjarne; North, Adrian2012A review of the adult attachment literature revealed previous research findings to demonstrate attachment-based baseline differences in the well-being factor of life satisfaction but not to consider moderating factors nor fluctuations in life satisfaction experience. Furthermore, social cognitive processes highlighted within the subjective well-being literature, namely those captured within social comparison theory, have rarely been examined within an adult attachment perspective. The current thesis sought to address these gaps through investigating the predictive influences of moderating and mediating factors in associations between adult attachment and well-being. Across 5 studies, individuals’ relationship experiences (namely relationship status, satisfaction, and status-changing events), social comparison tendencies (both within general and relationship- and partner-specific contexts), and social-comparison ranking perceptions were each examined. Findings revealed that relationship experiences indeed appeared to moderate individuals’ attachment-based feelings of subjective well-being, with greater anxiety in particular suggestive of more maladaptive cognitive and affective experience (Study 1). Social comparison tendencies, both general and interpersonally-oriented, were also identified to differ on the basis of anxiety and avoidance, with adverse comparison habits found to partially mediate associations between anxiety and both life satisfaction and self-esteem (Studies 2 and 4). Lastly, attachment-based differences in social-ranking perceptions were identified (Study 5), with anxiety found to interact with relationship status while an interaction between anxiety, ranking perceptions and relationship length as predictor of life satisfaction was found to be approaching significance.570Heriot-Watt Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575296http://hdl.handle.net/10399/2602Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 570
spellingShingle 570
Johnson, Kimberly Robyn
Adult attachment, social comparison, romantic relationship experience, and well-being
description A review of the adult attachment literature revealed previous research findings to demonstrate attachment-based baseline differences in the well-being factor of life satisfaction but not to consider moderating factors nor fluctuations in life satisfaction experience. Furthermore, social cognitive processes highlighted within the subjective well-being literature, namely those captured within social comparison theory, have rarely been examined within an adult attachment perspective. The current thesis sought to address these gaps through investigating the predictive influences of moderating and mediating factors in associations between adult attachment and well-being. Across 5 studies, individuals’ relationship experiences (namely relationship status, satisfaction, and status-changing events), social comparison tendencies (both within general and relationship- and partner-specific contexts), and social-comparison ranking perceptions were each examined. Findings revealed that relationship experiences indeed appeared to moderate individuals’ attachment-based feelings of subjective well-being, with greater anxiety in particular suggestive of more maladaptive cognitive and affective experience (Study 1). Social comparison tendencies, both general and interpersonally-oriented, were also identified to differ on the basis of anxiety and avoidance, with adverse comparison habits found to partially mediate associations between anxiety and both life satisfaction and self-esteem (Studies 2 and 4). Lastly, attachment-based differences in social-ranking perceptions were identified (Study 5), with anxiety found to interact with relationship status while an interaction between anxiety, ranking perceptions and relationship length as predictor of life satisfaction was found to be approaching significance.
author2 Holmes, Bjarne; North, Adrian
author_facet Holmes, Bjarne; North, Adrian
Johnson, Kimberly Robyn
author Johnson, Kimberly Robyn
author_sort Johnson, Kimberly Robyn
title Adult attachment, social comparison, romantic relationship experience, and well-being
title_short Adult attachment, social comparison, romantic relationship experience, and well-being
title_full Adult attachment, social comparison, romantic relationship experience, and well-being
title_fullStr Adult attachment, social comparison, romantic relationship experience, and well-being
title_full_unstemmed Adult attachment, social comparison, romantic relationship experience, and well-being
title_sort adult attachment, social comparison, romantic relationship experience, and well-being
publisher Heriot-Watt University
publishDate 2012
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575296
work_keys_str_mv AT johnsonkimberlyrobyn adultattachmentsocialcomparisonromanticrelationshipexperienceandwellbeing
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