Körner Robert, Overall Nickola C, Chang Valerie T, Hammond Matthew D, Sasaki Eri, Schütz Astrid, Zverling Erez
University of Bamberg, Germany.
University of Auckland, New Zealand.
Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2025 Apr 29:1461672251333165. doi: 10.1177/01461672251333165.
Power emerges from the relational dynamics between two people, but it is often studied as a feature of the individual. The current studies apply a dyadic perspective to show that core relational beliefs not only shape actors' relationship power but also generate behaviors that constrain their partner's power. Across five studies with Israeli, German, and New Zealand couples (total 1,256 dyads), greater attachment avoidance and anxiety were associated with lower actor power. Revealing novel dyadic effects, greater attachment avoidance was associated with partner's experiencing lower power. Studies 4 and 5 showed that actors higher in avoidance enacted greater withdrawal during conflict and daily life as perceived by partners and observed by independent coders. Actors' withdrawal, in turn, predicted partners experiencing lower power. These findings advance power and relationship theories and research by highlighting how relational characteristics and behaviors (withdrawal) likely shape the experience of both actors' and partners' power in social relationships.
权力源自两人之间的关系动态,但它常常被作为个体的一种特征来研究。当前的研究采用二元视角来表明,核心关系信念不仅塑造了行动者的关系权力,还产生了限制其伴侣权力的行为。在对以色列、德国和新西兰夫妇进行的五项研究(共1256对)中,更高的依恋回避和焦虑与行动者更低的权力相关。揭示了新的二元效应,更高的依恋回避与伴侣感受到更低的权力相关。研究4和研究5表明,回避程度更高的行动者在冲突和日常生活中表现出更多的退缩行为,这是伴侣所感知到的,也是独立编码员所观察到的。行动者的退缩行为反过来又预示着伴侣会感受到更低的权力。这些发现通过强调关系特征和行为(退缩)如何可能塑造社会关系中行动者和伴侣双方的权力体验,推进了权力和关系理论及研究。