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A Relational Turbulence Model of Communication About Irritations in Romantic Relationships
164
Citations
77
References
2006
Year
Interpersonal AdaptationSocial PsychologyCouple PsychologyCommunicationRelational Turbulence ModelPsychologySocial SciencesInterpersonal AttractionIntimate RelationshipPersonal RelationshipSocial Exchange TheoryRelational UncertaintyRomantic RelationshipsHuman CommunicationInterpersonal CommunicationSocial BehaviorPartner UncertaintyInterpersonal RelationshipsRelational CommunicationArtsEmotionRelational Irritations
The authors examined the impact of intimacy, relational uncertainty, and a partner’s interference on the directness of communication about relational irritations. The authors hypothesized that directness has (a) a positive association with the perceived negativity of irritations, intimacy, and self uncertainty; (b) a negative association with relationship uncertainty; (c) a negative association with partner uncertainty that is mediated by relationship uncertainty; and (d) a positive association with a partner’s interference that is mediated by the perceived negativity of irritations. The authors conducted a longitudinal Web-based survey in which individuals in romantic associations reported on qualities of their relationships once per week for 6 weeks. A structural equation model of data from the first week was consistent with the authors’ hypotheses. Longitudinal analyses of the full data set using hierarchical linear modeling provided mixed support for the authors’ predictions. The article discusses the implications of the findings for understanding both communicative directness and turbulence within developing dating relationships.
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