Department of Psychology, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH 03824, USA.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2009 Dec;35(12):1672-86. doi: 10.1177/0146167209348380.
In three studies, the authors tested a model positing that chronically insecure individuals often believe that their relationship partners view them as highly insecure. In turn, because of expectations regarding the social consequences of expressing insecurities, these reflected appraisals of insecurity are thought to predict suspicion of partners' authenticity and feelings of powerlessness within relationships. Results supported these predictions. Self-esteem, attachment anxiety, neuroticism, proclivity for anger, and proclivity for hurt feelings predicted reflected appraisals of insecurity independently of whether partners detected insecurity. In turn, chronically insecure participants were suspicious of their partners' authenticity and felt powerless in their relationships partly because they believed they were viewed as insecure. This research suggests that beliefs that one is perceived as insecure, even when they are misguided, can partially explain interpersonal cognitions associated with actually being insecure.
在三项研究中,作者检验了一个假设模型,即长期缺乏安全感的个体通常认为他们的关系伴侣认为他们非常缺乏安全感。反过来,由于对表达不安全感的社会后果的预期,这些反映出的不安全感评估被认为可以预测对伴侣真实性的怀疑和关系中无力感。研究结果支持了这些预测。自尊、依恋焦虑、神经质、愤怒倾向和易受伤倾向独立于伴侣是否察觉到不安全感,预测了不安全感的反映评估。反过来,长期缺乏安全感的参与者对他们伴侣的真实性持怀疑态度,并且在他们的关系中感到无能为力,部分原因是他们认为自己被视为缺乏安全感。这项研究表明,即使是错误的,认为自己被视为缺乏安全感的信念,可以部分解释与实际缺乏安全感相关的人际认知。