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Substituting the forest for the trees: Social networks and the prediction of romantic relationship state and fate.
121
Citations
67
References
2001
Year
Social PsychologySocial InfluenceDyadic ProcessesSocial NetworkPsychologySocial SciencesRelationship StateIntimate RelationshipSocial DynamicPersonal RelationshipSocial Network AnalysisSocial NetworksRomantic Relationship StateRomantic RelationshipsInterpersonal CommunicationHeterosexual CouplesSocial BehaviorSociologyInterpersonal RelationshipsRelationship DissolutionArtsSocial Exchange Theory
This research focused on perceptions held by heterosexual couples' friendship network concerning the couple's relationship. In a three-wave longitudinal study, we examined (a) whether these perceptions were similar to the couple's views of the relationship, (b) whether they predicted current relationship state and future fate, and (c) how they compared with the couple's perceptions in predicting fate. Consistent with within-dyad idealization, results from a North American sample indicated that network perceptions of relationship state were significantly more negative than those held by a couple. Although both the couples' and the total networks' perceptions predicted fate, friends of the female couple member were particularly successful at predicting relationship dissolution. An examination of possible mechanisms whereby friends may come to possess particularly predictive perceptions supported the role of couple-disclosure in this process.
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