Sentences with phrase «dyadic relationship statuses»

Participants with relfies and dyadic relationship statuses were judged to have higher quality relationships (satisfaction and commitment).
In some of the profiles we included a dyad profile picture (or not); likewise, sometimes a dyadic relationship status was provided.
More than 25 % of our participants (who were all in romantic relationships) had a dyadic profile picture and nearly 70 % had a dyadic relationship status on Facebook.
Our coders (members of our research team who did not know what the participants actually said about their relationships and didn't know the hypotheses of our study), then collected information from those profiles including whether participants had a «dyadic profile picture» (i.e., a relfie or similar picture that included both the individual and his or her partner) and if their relationship status indicated that they were «in a relationship...» (i.e., a «dyadic relationship status»).

Not exact matches

The traditional model of the western nuclear family, consisting of married heterosexual parents and their legitimate offspring, has undergone enormous change in the last two hundred years — attaching family status to unmarried partnerships and legalizing same - sex marriage are only the most recent changes — perhaps expectations as to exclusivity and the dyadic nature of committed relationships are next.
New research suggests that people's profile pictures and status updates reflect how satisfied they are in their relationships and how close they feel to their partners.2 Across three studies, including both married and dating samples, my colleagues and I found that people who reported higher relationship satisfaction and closeness to their partners were more likely to display dyadic (read: couple - y) profile pictures and to have partners that posted dyadic profile pictures as well.
Again, we found that people depicted in profiles with dyadic pictures and statuses were judged to have better relationships and were better liked.
Evidence that dyadic relationships and group processes are handled by different mental modules was cited by Vandell: Children's friendships and their status in the peer group have different short - and long - term correlates (e.g., Bagwell, Newcomb, & Bukowski, 1998; Vandell & Hembree, l994).
Results indicated that (1) depressed patients and their spouses were less dyadically adjusted than nondepressed spouses, (2) causal and responsibility attributions about depressive behaviors predicted lower dyadic adjustment, and (3) attributions of causality mediated the relationship between group status (depressed or nondepressed) and dyadic adjustment among spouses who had higher expectations for their partner to change.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z