Publication | Closed Access
The longitudinal impact of demand and withdrawal during marital conflict.
282
Citations
10
References
1995
Year
Quality Of LifeSocial PsychologyLongitudinal ImpactSocial SciencesPartial CorrelationsPsychologyIntimate RelationshipGender StudiesPersonal RelationshipCouple TherapyRelationship SatisfactionSexual And Reproductive HealthFamily RelationshipsHealth SciencesMarital TherapySexual BehaviorMarriageInterpersonal CommunicationSociologySatisfaction MeasureInterpersonal RelationshipsFamily Psychology
Forty-eight couples completed a measure of relationship satisfaction and participated in 2 video-taped problem-solving interactions, 1 focused on an issue identified by the woman and 1 focused on an issue identified by the man. Thirty-six men and 36 women completed the satisfaction measure again 2.5 years later. Demandingness, and to a lesser extent withdrawal, during the interactions showed many significant associations with both Time 1 and Time 2 satisfaction. The relationship of demandingness and withdrawal to change in satisfaction was also examined using both change scores and partial correlations. Withdrawal by men and woman demand-man withdraw during discussions of issues identified by the women reliably predicted change (decline) in wives' relationship satisfaction.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1