Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine.
Emotion. 2022 Sep;22(6):1387-1393. doi: 10.1037/emo0000939. Epub 2021 Feb 25.
Motivated by collective emotions theories that propose emotions shared between individuals predict group-level qualities, we hypothesized that co-experienced affect during interactions is associated with relationship quality, above and beyond the effects of individually experienced affect. Consistent with positivity resonance theory, we also hypothesized that co-experienced positive affect would have a stronger association with relationship quality than would co-experienced negative affect. We tested these hypotheses in 150 married couples across 3 conversational interactions: a conflict, a neutral topic, and a pleasant topic. Spouses continuously rated their individual affective experience during each conversation while watching video-recordings of their interactions. These individual affect ratings were used to determine, for positive and negative affect separately, the number of seconds of co-experienced affect and individually experienced affect during each conversation. In line with hypotheses, results from all 3 conversational topics suggest that more co-experienced positive affect is associated with greater marital quality, whereas more co-experienced negative affect is associated with worse marital quality. Individual level affect factors added little explanatory value beyond co-experienced affect. Comparing co-experienced positive affect and co-experienced negative affect, we found that co-experienced positive affect generally outperformed co-experienced negative affect, although co-experienced negative affect was especially diagnostic during the pleasant conversational topic. Findings suggest that co-experienced positive affect may be an integral component of high-quality relationships and highlight the power of co-experienced affect for individual perceptions of relationship quality. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
受集体情绪理论的启发,该理论提出个体之间共享的情绪可以预测群体层面的特征,我们假设在互动中共同体验到的情绪与关系质量有关,这超过了个体体验到的情绪的影响。与正性共振理论一致,我们还假设共同体验到的积极情绪与关系质量的相关性比共同体验到的消极情绪更强。我们在 150 对已婚夫妇的 3 次对话互动中检验了这些假设:一次冲突、一次中性话题和一次愉快的话题。配偶在观看互动视频记录的同时,持续对每次对话中的个人情感体验进行评分。这些个人情感评分用于分别确定积极情绪和消极情绪在每次对话中共同体验到的情绪和个人体验到的情绪的秒数。与假设一致,所有 3 个对话主题的结果都表明,更多的共同体验到的积极情绪与更好的婚姻质量相关,而更多的共同体验到的消极情绪与更差的婚姻质量相关。个人情感因素除了共同体验到的情感之外,几乎没有增加多少解释价值。比较共同体验到的积极情绪和共同体验到的消极情绪,我们发现,共同体验到的积极情绪通常表现优于共同体验到的消极情绪,尽管在愉快的对话主题中,共同体验到的消极情绪尤其具有诊断性。研究结果表明,共同体验到的积极情绪可能是高质量关系的一个组成部分,并强调了共同体验到的情绪对个体对关系质量的感知的力量。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2022 APA,保留所有权利)。