Sasaki Eri, Overall Nickola C, Reis Harry T, Righetti Francesca, Chang Valerie T, Low Rachel S T, Henderson Annette M E, McRae Caitlin S, Cross Emily J, Jayamaha Shanuki D, Maniaci Michael R, Reid Camille J
School of Psychology, University of Auckland.
Department of Clinical and Social Sciences in Psychology, University of Rochester.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2023 Aug;125(2):367-396. doi: 10.1037/pspi0000419. Epub 2023 Feb 27.
Feeling loved (loved, cared for, accepted, valued, understood) is inherently dyadic, yet most prior theoretical perspectives and investigations have focused on how actors feeling (un)loved shapes actors' outcomes. Adopting a dyadic perspective, the present research tested whether the established links between actors feeling unloved and destructive (critical, hostile) behavior depended on partners' feelings of being loved. Does feeling loved need to be mutual to reduce destructive behavior, or can partners feeling loved compensate for actors feeling unloved? In five dyadic observational studies, couples were recorded discussing conflicts, diverging preferences or relationship strengths, or interacting with their child (total = 842 couples; 1,965 interactions). Participants reported how much they felt loved during each interaction and independent coders rated how much each person exhibited destructive behavior. Significant Actors' × Partners' Felt-Loved interactions revealed a pattern: partners' high felt-loved buffered the damaging effect of actors' low felt-loved on destructive behavior, resulting in actors' destructive behavior mostly occurring when both actors' and partners' felt-loved was low. This dyadic pattern also emerged in three supplemental daily sampling studies. Providing directional support for the pattern, in Studies 4 and 5 involving two or more sequential interactions, Actors' × Partners' Felt-Loved in one interaction predicted actors' destructive behavior within couples' subsequent conflict interactions. The results illustrate the dyadic nature of feeling loved: Partners feeling loved can protect against actors feeling unloved in challenging interactions. Assessing Actor × Partner effects should be equally valuable for advancing understanding of other fundamentally dyadic relationship processes. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
感受到被爱(被关爱、被接纳、被重视、被理解)本质上是二元的,但大多数先前的理论观点和研究都集中在感受到(未感受到)被爱的个体如何塑造其行为结果上。本研究采用二元视角,检验了个体感受到不被爱与破坏性行为(批评、敌意)之间已确立的联系是否取决于伴侣感受到被爱的程度。感受到被爱需要双方相互才能减少破坏性行为吗?还是说伴侣感受到被爱可以弥补个体感受到不被爱?在五项二元观察研究中,记录了夫妻讨论冲突、分歧偏好或关系优势,或与他们的孩子互动的情况(总共842对夫妻;1965次互动)。参与者报告了他们在每次互动中感受到被爱的程度,独立编码员对每个人表现出的破坏性行为程度进行了评分。显著的个体×伴侣感受到被爱的交互作用揭示了一种模式:伴侣感受到被爱的程度高缓冲了个体感受到被爱的程度低对破坏性行为的损害作用,导致个体的破坏性行为大多在个体和伴侣感受到被爱的程度都低时发生。这种二元模式也出现在三项补充的日常抽样研究中。在涉及两个或更多连续互动的研究4和研究5中,为该模式提供了方向性支持,一次互动中的个体×伴侣感受到被爱的程度预测了夫妻随后冲突互动中个体的破坏性行为。结果说明了感受到被爱的二元性质:伴侣感受到被爱可以在具有挑战性的互动中防止个体感受到不被爱。评估个体×伴侣效应对于推进对其他基本二元关系过程的理解同样具有价值。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2023美国心理学会,保留所有权利)