Not to mention most of the time not even acknowledging when a point you've made i refuted, and just running away from a conversation, like when you posted that bogus
study of gay couples a whil back.
Not exact matches
Every
study done thus far has shown that the children
of gay couples are no different than those
of straight
couples.
The psychological profiles
of Holmes and Watson are a little overplayed in the pilot telefilm, «A
Study in Pink» (a reworking
of «A
Study in Scarlet») and the running joke that everyone assumes these roommates and partners in detection are a
gay couple (is it all that bickering?)
The deterioration
of relationship quality for
gay and lesbian cohabiting
couples: A five - year prospective longitudinal
study: Personal Relationships Vol 3 (4) Dec 1996, 417 - 442.
(A
study published in 2010 found 50 percent
of gay male
couples in the Bay Area had sexual relationships outside their union, with their partner's knowledge and approval.)
10 years after that first workshop, we are proud to share the exciting results
of the first outcome research
study on
couples therapy with
gay and lesbian
couples.
In this
study, the
gay and straight
couples brought up the same sort
of problems, but
gay couples were, by a statistically significant margin, less defensive during fights and more likely to use shared humor to soften the tension
of the conversation.
For one peer - reviewed
study published in the Journal
of Homosexuality, Gottman and his colleague Robert Levenson at the University
of Washington brought straight and
gay couples into Gottman's lab and interviewed each
couple separately about an issue they fought about.
In a peer - reviewed article that has just been accepted for publication in the Journal
of Marital and Family Therapy (JMFT), Certified Gottman Therapist Salvatore Garanzini and Alapaki Yee
of the
Gay Couples Institute, in collaboration with Drs. John and Julie Gottman of The Gottman Institute, report the groundbreaking results of a five - year study with 106 gay and lesbian coupl
Gay Couples Institute, in collaboration with Drs. John and Julie Gottman of The Gottman Institute, report the groundbreaking results of a five - year study with 106 gay and lesbian c
Couples Institute, in collaboration with Drs. John and Julie Gottman
of The Gottman Institute, report the groundbreaking results
of a five - year
study with 106
gay and lesbian coupl
gay and lesbian
couplescouples.
Using state -
of - the - art methods while
studying 21
gay and 21 lesbian
couples, Dr. John Gottman and Dr. Robert Levenson (University
of California at Berkeley) were able to learn what makes same - sex relationships succeed or fail in The 12 Year
Study.
Just last month, a new
study reported that between 1975 and 2000, American
couples of all types (heterosexual,
gay, and lesbian) became significantly more monogamous.1 Among the
study's many findings, the changing face
of marital monogamy was particularly surprising.
Levenson and I also conducted a 12 - year
study of gay and lesbian
couples, work we published in two papers in the Journal
of Homosexuality.
In September
of 2017, Certified Gottman Therapist Salvatore Garanzini and Alapaki Yee, MFT, along with Drs. John and Julie Gottman, published the results
of the first outcome research
study on
couples therapy with
gay and lesbian
couples in the Journal
of Marital and Family Therapy.
One
study comparing interracial and same - race lesbian
couples found no differences in reported levels
of stress or social support between those in interracial or same - race relationships.3 In a separate
study,
gay men in Black / White interracial relationships reported little resistance toward their relationships from friends, mixed reactions from family, and few problems dealing with cultural differences with their partners.4
Using state -
of - the - art methods while
studying 21
gay and 21 lesbian
couples, Dr. John Gottman and Dr. Robert Levenson have learned what makes same - sex relationships succeed or fail.
Our cross-sectional
study used dyadic data from 142
gay male
couples to assess actor — partner effects
of relationship commitment, trust, and investment in one's sexual agreement for HIV risk.
According to a University
of Michigan
study, when
gay couples make, and stand by, sexual agreements, they are helping... (read more)
The varying degrees
of stigma the fictional,
gay couple faced in
Study 2 does not represent the intricate web
of how different forms and degrees
of stigma and support interact can not be teased apart so easily, but rather acted as a cue for participants to recognize that stigma often piles up on people with multiple, stigmatized identities (Sanders Thompson, Noel, & Campbell, 2004).
In the second
study, participants read a scenario
of a male,
gay relationship with various degree
of stigma (none, one, two, or three sources), and rated how much the
couple loved each other.
The
study looked at 21 lesbian
couples and 21
gay male
couples, and compared them to 42 straight marriages
of the same length
of relationship and relationship satisfaction, as measured on a questionnaire.
To assess
couples» attitudes, and associated factors toward using CVCT, a cross-sectional
study design was used with a novel Internet - based recruitment method to collect dyadic data from a national sample
of 275 HIV - negative
gay couples.