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Journal articles on the topic 'Jealousy in romantic relationships'

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1

Kim, Kaylyn J., Brooke C. Feeney, and Brittany K. Jakubiak. "Touch reduces romantic jealousy in the anxiously attached." Journal of Social and Personal Relationships 35, no. 7 (2017): 1019–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0265407517702012.

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Feelings of jealousy are usually detrimental to relationships, often resulting in negative outcomes ranging from conflict to violence and relationship dissolution. Anxiously attached individuals are especially prone to jealousy in their relationships and are therefore especially likely to experience negative outcomes of jealousy. In this research, we examined the effectiveness of both touch and a traditional security prime as a potential means of reducing feelings of jealousy for individuals who are high in anxious attachment. Individuals in romantic relationships were induced to feel jealous, during which time they were randomly assigned to receive affectionate touch from their partners, a traditional nontouch security prime, or no intervention (control). Results revealed that anxious attachment was associated with high levels of jealousy, and touch was an effective buffer against jealous feelings for individuals high in anxious attachment. The traditional security prime did not buffer jealous feelings. Implications of results for potential relationship interventions are discussed.
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Opekina, Tatyana P., and Anastasia A. Golubeva. "Experiencing Jealousy in Close Relationships and Psychological Well-Being of Adult Men and Women." Herald of Omsk University. Series: Psychology, no. 4 (December 28, 2020): 53–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.24147/2410-6364.2020.4.53-59.

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The article examines the phenomenon of jealousy in close (romantic) relationships of adults. The article presents the results of a study on the experience of jealousy of adult men and women in close relationships. Based on qualitative research (interviews) and quantitative data processing, the author analyzes the strength of jealousy in relationships between men and women. The negative connections of the power of jealousy with the components of psychological and subjective well-being are described. The article provides data on the specific characteristics of romantic attachment inherent in adults with a high power of jealousy in relationships: frustration, ambivalence, a tendency to “grow together” with a partner. It is described that the strength of partners' jealousy is negatively related to their satisfaction with the relationship. Sex differences in reactions to jealousy, an increase in the strength of emotional reactions to jealousy with an increase in the duration of the relationship are analyzed.
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3

Frampton, Jessica R., and Jesse Fox. "Social Media’s Role in Romantic Partners’ Retroactive Jealousy: Social Comparison, Uncertainty, and Information Seeking." Social Media + Society 4, no. 3 (2018): 205630511880031. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2056305118800317.

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Social media often have a dark side in romantic relationships. Affordances such as persistence, association, and visibility can promote romantic jealousy and the salience of relationship threats, including ex-partners. Retroactive jealousy occurs when a person feels upset about their partner’s romantic history even though ex-partners are not actively interfering in the current relationship. Interviews ( N = 36) probed how participants felt social networking sites (SNSs) promoted and mitigated retroactive romantic jealousy. Furthermore, we examined the consequences of these experiences. Participants indicated that SNSs lead to retroactive jealousy via social comparison, digital remnants, and relational uncertainty. In addition, participants used SNSs to gather information or monitor their partners. These information-seeking activities allowed them to disparage a romantic partner’s exes; avoid direct, interactive information seeking about exes; and digitally fact-check information the partner disclosed. Some participants reframed information about the ex-relationship or actively avoided SNSs to reduce retroactive jealousy. Although SNSs may be used in an attempt to mitigate retroactive jealousy, our findings suggest this strategy may backfire in some cases.
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Potyszová, Kateřina, and Klára Bártová. "Romantická žárlivost u heterosexuálních a homosexuálních jedinců z pohledu evoluční psychologie." Ceskoslovenska psychologie 65, no. 1 (2021): 101–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.51561/cspsych.65.1.101.

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Jealousy is defined as one of the most common automatic responses to endangering a relationship by a third party, and in evolutionary psychology it has the function of maximizing self-reproduction fitness, ensuring paternity security in men, and maintaining partner's resources in women. These include romantic jealousy, in men assuring certainty of paternity, and in women assuring the maintenance of partner's resources. Thus, according to this logic, a woman’s sexual infidelity should be more threatening for men and a man’s emotional infidelity (emotional involvement with other women than a primary partner) should be more threatening for women. Many previous studies confirm the existence of sex differences in jealousy; men reporting a higher level of sexual jealousy and women reporting a higher level of emotional jealousy. On the contrary, studies of romantic jealousy in homosexual individuals show inconsistent results. Some studies suggest that the type of sexual and emotional jealousy does not depend on the sex of the individual who is jealous, but rather on the sex of the partner or the sex of the rival. Therefore, the aim of this review is to introduce romantic jealousy from an evolutionary perspective and to acquaint the reader with current knowledge of the study of cognitive, emotional and behavioral aspects of romantic jealousy in heterosexual and homosexual men and women.
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Moroń, Marcin, Paulina Grzywnowicz, Adam Łojan, Marlena Szyszłow, and Ewa Warlewska. "Reinforcement sensitivity and jealousy in romantic relationships." Roczniki Psychologiczne 19, no. 1 (2016): 191–202. http://dx.doi.org/10.18290/rpsych.2016.19.1-7en.

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Ubaidillah, M. Burhanuddin. "RESOLUSI KONFLIK ROMANTIC JEALOUSY PASANGAN SUAMI ISTRI DALAM PRESPEKTIF HADITS KUTUB AL-TIS’AH." Usratuna: Jurnal Hukum Keluarga Islam 4, no. 2 (2021): 40–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.29062/usratuna.v4i2.318.

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Romantic Jealousy or jealousy in a romantic relationship is a relatively common feeling. Romantic Jealousy is a divine decree that cannot be avoided and is not worthy of being hostile. Romantic Jealousy is part of the implication of love and loyalty. Romantic Jealousy is a kind of feeling of worry or fear of losing a life partner, with the presence of a third party who has the ability to influence, seduce and seduce. Romantic Jealousy is a reaction that occurs in a romantic relationship that is being threatened by a third party, both subjective and real, which is usually followed by a fear of losing their partner. When experiencing it, usually the rational system does not work as it should. This article focuses on the study of the romantic jealousy hadiths of the Prophet's wives, especially isyah's romantic jealousy to Umm Salamah, to Ḥafṣah, to Shofiyyah, and to Khadījah as well as Hafsah's romantic jealousy to isyah along with the resolution of the Prophet's conflicts contained in al-Kutub al- Tis'ah and only revolves around the level of meaning.
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7

Marazziti, Donatella, Giorgio Consoli, Francesco Albanese, Emanuela Laquidara, Stefano Baroni, and Mario Catena Dell’Osso. "Romantic Attachment and Subtypes/Dimensions of Jealousy." Clinical Practice & Epidemiology in Mental Health 6, no. 1 (2010): 53–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1745017901006010053.

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The present study explored the possible relationship between romantic attachment and jealousy in 100 healthy subjects. The romantic attachment and jealousy were evaluated by means of, respectively, the “Experiences in Close Relationships” questionnaire (ECR), and the “Questionario della Gelosia” (QUEGE). The ECR anxiety scale was related to all QUEGE dimensions, while the ECR avoidance scale to three. Individuals with the preoccupied attachment style showed higher scores than secure subjects on the obsessionality, interpersonal sensitivity and fear of loss dimensions. Fearful-avoidant individuals had higher score than secure subjects on the fear of loss dimension only, while dismissing individuals had lower scores on the self-esteem dimension.These findings suggest that romantic attachment and jealousy are intertwined.
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8

Spottswood, Erin, and Christopher J. Carpenter. "The Hyperception Model." International Journal of Interactive Communication Systems and Technologies 10, no. 1 (2020): 1–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijicst.2020010101.

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The hyperperception model was used to identify the importance of Facebook users knowing their romantic partner's Facebook friends in predicting romantic jealousy. A cross-sectional survey (N = 615) found that surveillance of romantic partners, knowing fewer of the partner's Facebook friends, and frequent interactions between the partner and unknown but not known friends on Facebook were all associated with romantic jealousy, which was in turn associated with a greater intention of leaving one's romantic partner. The data was also consistent with good fit for a path model integrating these bivariate relationships.
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Martínez-León, Nancy Consuelo, Juan José Peña, Hernán Salazar, Andrea García, and Juan Carlos Sierra. "A systematic review of romantic jealousy in relationships." Terapia psicológica 35, no. 2 (2017): 203–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.4067/s0718-48082017000200203.

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10

Zheng, Xiaoxiao, Xiaolei Xu, Lei Xu, et al. "Intranasal oxytocin may help maintain romantic bonds by decreasing jealousy evoked by either imagined or real partner infidelity." Journal of Psychopharmacology 35, no. 6 (2021): 668–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0269881121991576.

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Background: While romantic jealousy may help to maintain relationships, following partner infidelity and an irretrievable loss of trust it can also promote break-ups. The neuropeptide oxytocin can enhance the maintenance of social bonds and reduce couple conflict, although its influence on jealousy evoked by imagined or real infidelity is unclear. Aims: This study aimed to investigate the effects of intranasal oxytocin (24 IU) on romantic jealousy in both males and females in imagined and real contexts. Methods: Seventy heterosexual couples participated in this double-blind, placebo-controlled, between-subject design study. Jealousy was firstly quantified in the context of subjects imagining partner infidelity and secondly in a Cyberball game where their partner interacted preferentially with an opposite-sexed rival stranger to simulate partner exclusion, or rejected a neutral stranger but not the partner. Results: Oxytocin primarily decreased jealousy and arousal ratings towards imagined emotional and sexual infidelity by a partner in both sexes. During the Cyberball game, while male and female subjects in both groups subsequently threw the ball least often to the rival stranger, under oxytocin they showed reduced romantic jealousy and arousal ratings for stranger players, particularly the rival one, and reported reduced negative and increased positive feelings while playing the game. Conclusions: Together, our results suggest that oxytocin can reduce the negative emotional impact of jealousy in established romantic partners evoked by imagined or real infidelity or exclusive social interactions with others. This provides further support for oxytocin promoting maintenance of relationships.
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11

Rodriguez, Lindsey M., Angelo M. DiBello, Camilla S. Øverup, and Clayton Neighbors. "The Price of Distrust: Trust, Anxious Attachment, Jealousy, and Partner Abuse." Partner Abuse 6, no. 3 (2015): 298–319. http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/1946-6560.6.3.298.

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Trust is essential to the development of healthy, secure, and satisfying relationships (Simpson, 2007a). Attachment styles provide a theoretical framework for understanding how individuals respond to partner behaviors that either confirm or violate trust (Hazan & Shaver, 1994). The current research aimed to identify how trust and attachment anxiety might interact to predict different types of jealousy and physical and psychological abuse. We expected that when experiencing lower levels of trust, anxiously attached individuals would report higher levels of both cognitive and behavioral jealousy as well as partner abuse perpetration. Participants in committed romantic relationships (N= 261) completed measures of trust, attachment anxiety and avoidance, jealousy, and physical and psychological partner abuse in a cross-sectional study. Moderation results largely supported the hypotheses: Attachment anxiety moderated the association between trust and jealousy, such that anxious individuals experienced much higher levels of cognitive and behavioral jealousy when reporting lower levels of trust. Moreover, attachment anxiety moderated the association between trust and nonphysical violence. These results suggest that upon experiencing distrust in one’s partner, anxiously attached individuals are more likely to become jealous, snoop through a partner’s belongings, and become psychologically abusive. The present research illustrates that particularly for anxiously attached individuals, distrust has cascading effects on relationship cognitions and behavior, and this should be a key area of discussion during therapy.
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Carpenter, Christopher J. "Romantic Jealousy on Facebook." International Journal of Interactive Communication Systems and Technologies 6, no. 1 (2016): 1–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijicst.2016010101.

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This article uses White and Mullen's jealousy model as a basis to derive hypotheses about the causes and effects of Facebook-related romantic jealousy. A cross-sectional survey was conducted to test these hypotheses (N = 196). General Facebook use by the user or the romantic partner were not substantially related to user jealousy. Reports of a variety of interactions between partners and potential rivals were positively related to jealousy, including the partner posting on others' walls and acquiring new Facebook friends which are unknown to the user. Additionally, those interaction were also associated with attempts to improve the relationship using Facebook relational maintenance behaviors as well as intentions to end it or have casual extra-dyadic sex (infidelity).
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13

Arnocky, Steven, and Ashley Locke. "Jealousy Mediates the Link Between Women’s Upward Physical Appearance Comparison and Mate Retention Behavior." Evolutionary Psychology 18, no. 4 (2020): 147470492097399. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1474704920973990.

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Previous research has demonstrated that men’s lower mate value predicts increased perpetration of mate retention, especially with respect to cost inflicting behaviors. It is less clear if lower mate value women, including those who perceive themselves as being less physically attractive than their intrasexual rivals, also perpetrate more mate retention. Moreover, it is presently unclear whether romantic jealousy, which has been proposed to motivate compensatory behavior in response to evidence that a valued mating relationship is threatened, might mediate this link. The present study addressed this gap in knowledge by examining whether women’s overall self-perceived mate value and upward physical appearance comparisons predicted their cost inflicting and benefit provisioning mate retention, as well as whether jealousy mediated these relationships. In a sample of 167 heterosexual undergraduate women, results found self-perceived mate value predicted greater benefit provisioning mate retention, but not romantic jealousy. In contrast, jealousy mediated the relationship between women’s upward physical appearance comparisons and both their cost-inflicting and benefit-provisioning mate retention, supporting the hypothesis that jealousy in the face of unfavorable social comparisons on important mate value traits can promote action aimed at retaining a mate.
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14

Worley, Timothy R., and Jennifer Samp. "Friendship Characteristics, Threat Appraisals, and Varieties of Jealousy About Romantic Partners’ Friendships." Interpersona: An International Journal on Personal Relationships 8, no. 2 (2014): 231–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.5964/ijpr.v8i2.169.

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This study examined the role of friendship sex composition, friendship history, and threat appraisals in the experience of jealousy about a romantic partner’s involvement in extradyadic friendships. Using a survey, 201 individuals responded to scenarios describing a romantic partner’s involvement in a significant friendship outside the romantic dyad. A partner’s involvement in a cross-sex friendship was associated with greater perceptions of threat to both the existence and quality of the romantic relationship than was a partner’s involvement in a same-sex friendship. Further, the specific forms of jealousy experienced about partners’ friendships were dependent on the threat appraisals individuals associated with the friendships. Appraisals of relational existence threat mediated the influence of friendship characteristics (i.e., sex composition and history) on sexual jealousy and companionship jealousy, while appraisals of relational quality threat mediated the influence of friendship characteristics on intimacy jealousy, power jealousy, and companionship jealousy. This study points toward the central role of threat appraisals in mediating associations between rival characteristics and various forms of jealousy about a partner’s friendships.
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15

Mullen, Paul E., and J. Martin. "Jealousy: A Community Study." British Journal of Psychiatry 164, no. 1 (1994): 35–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.164.1.35.

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This study represents the first attempt to study sexual jealousy in a random community sample. Jealousy was reported by all subjects. Men, when jealous, were particularly concerned about the potential loss of the partner, whereas women were more concerned with the effects of infidelity on the quality of the relationship. Behaviours such as searching the partner's belongings or inspecting their clothes for signs of sexual activity correlated with unusually intense jealousy. Men tended to cope with jealousy by using denial and avoidance, whereas women were more likely to express their distress and to try to make themselves more attractive to their erring partner. Greater jealousy concerns were expressed by young men who had either married early or were now living without a partner. Heavy drinkers and those reporting more psychiatric symptoms were also more prone to jealousy. A clear correlation emerged between lowered self-esteem and increased jealousy, which was particularly marked in women, for whom robust self-esteem was virtually incompatible with high jealousy concerns. The study supported the prosaic notion that those who are satisfied with their romantic attachments are less prone to jealous suspicions. This study offers a starting point for the clinician seeking information about the experience of jealousy in the community.
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Pollet, Thomas V., and Tamsin K. Saxton. "Jealousy as a Function of Rival Characteristics: Two Large Replication Studies and Meta-Analyses Support Gender Differences in Reactions to Rival Attractiveness But Not Dominance." Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 46, no. 10 (2020): 1428–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0146167220904512.

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Jealousy is a key emotion studied in the context of romantic relationships. One seminal study (Dijkstra, P., & Buunk, B. (1998). Jealousy as a function of rival characteristics: An evolutionary perspective. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 24 (11), 1158–1166. https://doi.org/10.1177/01461672982411003) investigated the interactions between a participant’s gender and their reactions to the attractiveness or dominance of a romantic rival. In a vignette-based study, it was found that women’s jealousy was more responsive than men’s to a rival’s attractiveness, whereas in contrast, the rival’s dominance evoked more jealousy from men than from women. Here, we attempt to replicate these interactions in two samples ( N = 339 and N = 456) and present subsequent meta-analyses (combined Ns = 5,899 and 4,038, respectively). These meta-analyses showed a small, significant effect of gender on jealousy provoked by rival attractiveness, but no such response to rival dominance. We discuss the potential reasons for these findings and future directions for research on jealousy and rival characteristics.
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Brainerd, Edwin G., Patricia A. Hunter, DeWayne Moore, and Tisha R. Thompson. "Jealousy Induction as a Predictor of Power and the Use of other Control Methods in Heterosexual Relationships." Psychological Reports 79, no. 3_suppl (1996): 1319–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.1996.79.3f.1319.

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26 male and 87 female college students filled out Stets' Psychological Aggression Scale, Stets' Interpersonal Control Scale, Straus' Physical Violence Scale and Fisch and Brainerd's Use and Approval of Jealousy-inducing Behaviors Scale. Use and approval of jealousy-inducing behaviors were good predictors of high need for interpersonal control and the use of psychological Aggression. The use of jealousy-inducing behaviors but not the approval of these behaviors was a strong predictor of physical aggression in romantic relationships.
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Fussell, Nicola J., and Brian T. Stollery. "Between-Sex Differences in Romantic Jealousy: Substance or Spin? A Qualitative Analysis." Evolutionary Psychology 10, no. 1 (2012): 147470491201000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/147470491201000114.

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An influential evolutionary account of romantic jealousy proposes that natural selection shaped a specific sexually-dimorphic psychological mechanism in response to relationship threat. However, this account has faced considerable theoretical and methodological criticism and it remains unclear whether putative sex differences in romantic jealousy actually exist and, if they do, whether they are consistent with its predictions. Given the multidimensional nature of romantic jealousy, the current study employed a qualitative design to examine these issues. We report the results of sixteen semi-structured interviews that were conducted with heterosexual men and women with the purpose of exploring the emotions, cognitions and behaviors that formed their subjective, lived experience in response to relationship threat. Interpretative phenomenological analysis revealed four super-ordinate themes (“threat appraisal”, “emotional episodes”, “sex-specific threat” and “forgive and forget”) and unequivocal sex differences in romantic jealousy consistent with the evolutionary account. Self-esteem, particularly when conceptualized as an index of mate value, emerged as an important proximal mediator for both sexes. However, specific outcomes were dependent upon domains central to the individual's self concept that were primarily sex-specific. The findings are integrated within the context of existing self-esteem and evolutionary theory and future directions for romantic jealousy research are suggested.
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Dewi, Putu Yunita Trisna, and M. Arief Sumantri. "Menguji Kepuasan Hubungan Melalui Intimasi dan Perasaan Cemburu pada Pelaku Hubungan Friends with Benefits." Jurnal Psikologi Teori dan Terapan 10, no. 2 (2020): 114. http://dx.doi.org/10.26740/jptt.v10n2.p114-126.

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Friends with Benefits (FWB) is a friendship of the opposite sex that involves sexual activity without commitment, feelings of love and encouragement to continue the relationship toward a romantic relationship. This study aims to determine the role of intimacy and jealousy towards the relationship satisfaction of individuals undergoing the FWB and the role of jealousy towards intimacy, and describing the emotions and views of participants on their FWB relationships. The subjects were 304 people undergoing FWB relationship in the last two years. Data were collected using Miller Social Intimacy, Multidimensional Jealousy, and Relationship Assessment Scales. Hierarchical linear regression and descriptive analysis were used to analyze data. Participants’ experiences of their FBW relationship were also collected and analyzed qualitatively. The result showed that intimacy and jealousy significantly predicted the relationship satisfaction both simultaneously and partially. Jealousy also significantly influences intimacy. A qualitative analysis reveals three categories that describe the emotions and views of the participants towards their FWB relationships, namely feeling satisfied and happy, feeling less satisfied and regretful, and feeling happy but regretful.Keywords : friends with benefits, intimacy, jealousy, relationship satisfaction. Abstrak: Friends with Benefits (FWB) adalah hubungan pertemanan lawan jenis yang melibatkan hubungan seksual tanpa komitmen, perasaan cinta dan dorongan untuk melanjutkan ke hubungan yang romantis. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk menguji peranan intimasi dan perasaan cemburu terhadap kepuasan hubungan partisipan yang menjalani hubungan FWB, peranan perasaan cemburu terhadap intimasi, serta mendeskripsikan gambaran emosi dan pandangan partisipan saat menjalani hubungan FWB. Partisipan penelitian berjumlah 304 partisipan, yang menjalani hubungan FWB dalam kurun waktu dua tahun terakhir. Data dikumpulkan dengan skala Miller Social Intimacy, Multi-dimensional Jealousy, dan Relationship Assesment. Data dianalisis menggunakan regresi linier berjenjang. Data kualitatif juga dikumpulkan dan dianalisis secara deskriptif untuk mendalami perasaan dan pandangan partisipan terhadap FWB yang dijalani. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan intimasi dan perasaan cemburu secara signifikan mempengaruhi kepuasan hubungan baik secara simultan maupun parsial. Perasaan cemburu juga secara signifikan memberi pengaruh terhadap intimasi. Secara kualitatif, ditemukan tiga kategori yang menggambarkan emosi dan pandangan partisipan dalam menjalani hubungan FWB, yaitu merasa puas dan senang, kurang puas hingga menyesal, dan merasa senang namun ada penyesalan.
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Marelich, William D. "EFFECTS OF BEHAVIOR SETTINGS, EXTRADYADIC BEHAVIORS, AND INTERLOPER CHARACTERISTICS ON ROMANTIC JEALOUSY." Social Behavior and Personality: an international journal 30, no. 8 (2002): 785–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.2224/sbp.2002.30.8.785.

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This study assessed the effects of behavior-setting changes, partners' behavior toward an interloper, and importance of interloper characteristics for romantic jealousy. Participants were 162 individuals in dating relationships. Four jealousy dilemmas were presented that crossed two levels of behavior setting and two levels of partners' extradyadic behavior toward an interloper. Interloper characteristics were also embedded in the dilemmas. A 2 x 2 withinsubjects ANOVA revealed significant variation between behavior settings and extradyadic behaviors. A doubly-multivariate repeated measures MANOVA assessed the importance of interloper characteristics within behavior setting and extradyadic behavior, showing that interloper characteristics do play a role in reported jealousy. Findings are explained in terms of behavior-setting influences, coping appraisals, and self-maintenance evaluations.
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Mcintosh, Everton G. "AN INVESTIGATION OF ROMANTIC JEALOUSY AMONG BLACK UNDERGRADUATES." Social Behavior and Personality: an international journal 17, no. 2 (1989): 135–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.2224/sbp.1989.17.2.135.

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This study examined the relationship between jealousy and self-esteem, insecurity, external locus of control and sex. The sample consisted of 128 undergraduates who completed four self report inventories. A step-wise multiple regression analysis indicated that self-esteem and insecurity accounted for 28% of the total variance in jealousy. Contrary to prediction, however, external locus of control did not account for a significant amount of the variance in jealousy. Results are discussed in terms of the contributing roles of each predictor variable.
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Bevan, Jennifer L., and Pamela J. Lannutti. "The experience and expression of romantic jealousy in same‐sex and opposite‐sex romantic relationships." Communication Research Reports 19, no. 3 (2002): 258–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08824090209384854.

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Kaufman-Parks, Angela M., Alfred DeMaris, Peggy C. Giordano, Wendy D. Manning, and Monica A. Longmore. "Parents and partners." Journal of Social and Personal Relationships 34, no. 8 (2016): 1295–323. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0265407516676639.

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Prior work examining intimate partner violence (IPV) among young adults often has emphasized familial characteristics, such as parent–child physical aggression (PCPA), and romantic relationship dynamics, such as jealousy and controlling behaviors, but has not considered these two domains simultaneously. Likewise, research examining how these two domains affect IPV perpetration over time for young adults is still limited. Using five waves of data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study ( N = 950), the present study examined the influence of parent–child relationship factors and romantic relationship dynamics in both their main and interactive effects on IPV perpetration spanning adolescence through young adulthood. Results from random-effects analyses indicated that both familial and romantic relationship dynamics should be taken into account when predicting IPV perpetration. Importantly, these two domains interacted to produce cumulatively different risk for engaging in violence against a romantic partner. Individuals were more likely to perpetrate IPV when their romantic relationship was characterized by verbal aggression if they reported PCPA experiences.
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Wegner, Rhiana, Ashlin R. K. Roy, Kaitlyn R. Gorman, and Kayla Ferguson. "Attachment, relationship communication style and the use of jealousy induction techniques in romantic relationships." Personality and Individual Differences 129 (July 2018): 6–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2018.02.033.

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Murphy, Samantha M., Robin R. Vallacher, Todd K. Shackelford, David F. Bjorklund, and Jennifer L. Yunger. "Relationship experience as a predictor of romantic jealousy." Personality and Individual Differences 40, no. 4 (2006): 761–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2005.09.004.

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Goetz, Cari D., and Nestor M. Maria. "Who gets mad and who feels bad? Mate value discrepancies predict anger and shame in response to transgressions in romantic relationships." Journal of Social and Personal Relationships 36, no. 10 (2018): 2963–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0265407518808092.

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Mate value discrepancies (MVDs) predict multiple outcomes in romantic relationships, including relationship satisfaction, jealousy, and forgiveness. We tested the hypotheses that MVDs would predict anger and shame in response to both medium and strong transgressions within romantic relationships. Participants in long-term committed relationships read scenarios describing relational transgressions and rated how much anger and shame they would feel if they were either the victim or the perpetrator of the transgressions in their current relationship. We found partial support for our hypotheses. Victims of medium-level transgressions were angrier the more alternative potential mates there were that were closer to their ideal mate preferences than their current partner. Perpetrators of strong transgressions felt more shame the higher in mate value their partner was compared to them. Results suggest that different MVDs may predict different outcomes in relationships and highlight the importance of using functional theories of emotions to predict individual differences in emotional responses.
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RAUER, AMY J., and BRENDA L. VOLLING. "Differential parenting and sibling jealousy: Developmental correlates of young adults’ romantic relationships." Personal Relationships 14, no. 4 (2007): 495–511. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6811.2007.00168.x.

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Sidelinger, Robert J., and Melanie Booth–Butterfield. "Mate Value Discrepancy as Predictor of Forgiveness and Jealousy in Romantic Relationships." Communication Quarterly 55, no. 2 (2007): 207–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01463370701290426.

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Mogilski, Justin K., Simon D. Reeve, Sylis C. A. Nicolas, Sarah H. Donaldson, Virginia E. Mitchell, and Lisa L. M. Welling. "Jealousy, Consent, and Compersion Within Monogamous and Consensually Non-Monogamous Romantic Relationships." Archives of Sexual Behavior 48, no. 6 (2019): 1811–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10508-018-1286-4.

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Ma, Yidan, Weifeng Xue, Guang Zhao, Shen Tu, and Yong Zheng. "Romantic Love and Attentional Biases Toward Attractive Alternatives and Rivals: Long-Term Relationship Maintenance Among Female Chinese College Students." Evolutionary Psychology 17, no. 4 (2019): 147470491989760. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1474704919897601.

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Studies about heterosexual individuals’ long-term relationship maintenance have indicated that committed individuals possess evolved psychological mechanisms that help protect their ongoing romantic relationships against threats from attractive others during early stage attentional processing when mating-related motivation is activated. In this study, two experiments tested the relationship maintenance mechanism among committed female college students in the Chinese cultural context under different love priming conditions. Committed Chinese women displayed inattention to attractive alternatives in positive love-scenario priming (Study 1: 114 female undergraduates, age range = 18–26 years), subliminal semantic love priming (Study 2: 110 female undergraduates, age range = 18–25 years), and baseline conditions (Studies 1 and 2). Those with high levels of chronic jealousy showed significantly increased attention to and difficulty disengaging attention from attractive rivals when subliminally primed with love. This provides further evidence, from an Eastern cultural context, for the existence of attentional biases toward attractive alternatives and rivals in early stage attentional processes for relationship maintenance. This research also illustrates the important role of romantic love in maintaining long-term romantic relationships.
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Utz, Sonja, and Camiel J. Beukeboom. "The Role of Social Network Sites in Romantic Relationships: Effects on Jealousy and Relationship Happiness." Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication 16, no. 4 (2011): 511–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1083-6101.2011.01552.x.

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32

Samad, Farah Deena Abdul, Hatta Sidi, Jaya Kumar, Srijit Das, Marhani Midin, and Nurul Hazwani Hatta. "Subduing the Green-eyed Monster: Bridging the Psychopharmacological and Psychosocial Treatment Perspective in Understanding Pathological Jealousy." Current Drug Targets 20, no. 2 (2018): 201–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1389450118666170704142708.

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Human being is not spared from a broad-ranged emotional state, including being jealous. Jealousy has both affective-cognitive and behavioural-evaluative dimension where the person perceives, or experiences a real threat on a valued relationship. As this complex emotion becomes irrational and not amenable to reason, it later transforms into a dangerously ‘green-eyed monster’. This perilous situation which is viewed as pathological jealousy is a form of delusion, which is maintained by a fixed and false reasoning in an originally entrusted intimate relationship. Pathological jealousy is equally prevailing among both gender, and with a greater ubiquity among the geriatric population. The role of dopamine hyperactivity in the fronto-parietal-temporal region was implicated, with the anatomical mapping of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), cingulate gyrus (CG), and amygdala involvement in the context of the disease’s neurobiology. The etiology of pathological jealousy includes major psychiatric disorders, i.e. delusional disorder, schizophrenia, mood disorder, organic brain syndrome, and among others, the drug-induced psychosis. The role of relationship issues and psychodynamic perspective, i.e. psychological conflicts with dependence on a romantic partner, and low self-esteem are involved. Pathological jealousy inherits high-risk forensic psychiatry entanglement, which may warrant intensive intervention, including hospital admission and antipsychotic treatment. Treatment options include an early recognition, managing underlying neuropsychiatric disorders, psycho education, cognitive psychotherapy, and choosing an effective psychopharmacological agent. The management strategy may also resort to a geographical intervention, i.e. separation between both persons to complement the biological treatment.
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Seidman, Gwendolyn. "The Big 5 and relationship maintenance on Facebook." Journal of Social and Personal Relationships 36, no. 6 (2018): 1785–806. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0265407518772089.

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The current study examined associations between the Big 5, relationship maintenance activities on Facebook (public displays and partner surveillance), and Facebook-related relationship difficulties (conflict and jealousy). Two hundred fifty-seven individuals currently involved in romantic relationships completed an online survey assessing Facebook activity and the Big 5. Greater extraversion and conscientiousness were associated with higher frequency of displays of dyadic photographs and posts on one’s own or one’s partner’s Facebook page. High extraversion, low openness, and low conscientiousness were associated with engaging in excessive public displays on Facebook. High extraversion and neuroticism were associated with greater partner surveillance and Facebook-related conflict. Neuroticism was also associated with more Facebook-induced jealousy. Surveillance mediated the associations between these two traits and these negative outcomes. Openness and conscientiousness were associated with experiencing fewer negative outcomes of Facebook use.
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Elphinston, Rachel A., Judith A. Feeney, Patricia Noller, Jason P. Connor, and Jennifer Fitzgerald. "Romantic Jealousy and Relationship Satisfaction: The Costs of Rumination." Western Journal of Communication 77, no. 3 (2013): 293–304. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10570314.2013.770161.

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MATHES, EUGENE W. "DEALING WITH ROMANTIC JEALOUSY BY FINDING A REPLACEMENT RELATIONSHIP." Psychological Reports 69, no. 6 (1991): 535. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.69.6.535-538.

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Mathes, Eugene W. "Dealing with Romantic Jealousy by Finding a Replacement Relationship." Psychological Reports 69, no. 2 (1991): 535–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.1991.69.2.535.

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37

Bookwala, Jamila, Irene H. Frieze, Christine Smith, and Kathryn Ryan. "Predictors of Dating Violence: A Multivariate Analysis." Violence and Victims 7, no. 4 (1992): 297–311. http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/0886-6708.7.4.297.

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A multivariate approach was used to determine the pattern of predictors associated with engaging in dating violence. Predictors were selected whose relationship to dating violence has been established by earlier research: attitudes toward violence, sex-role attitudes, romantic jealousy, general levels of interpersonal aggression, verbal aggression, and verbal and physical aggression received from one’s partner. Participants included 305 introductory psychology student volunteers (227 females and 78 males) who completed a set of scales related to dating relationships. Expecting different patterns of predictors to emerge for men and women, we performed separate multiple regression analyses for each. Of the set of predictors employed, receipt of physical violence from one’s partner emerged as the largest predictor of expressed violence for both men and women. In addition, higher scores on attitudes toward violence and verbal aggression, and less traditional sex-role attitudes emerged as significant predictors of expressed violence formen. For women, less accepting attitudes toward violence, more traditional sex-role attitudes, feelings of romantic jealousy, higher general levels of interpersonal aggression, and verbal aggression were predictive of expressed violence. The implications of our findings for future research are discussed.
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Sarikaya, Niḣan Altan, Yasemin Koyunoglu, and Meral Kaya. "Emotional jealousy levels and coping methods in romantic relationships of health sciences students." Journal of Higher Education and Science 10, no. 3 (2020): 488. http://dx.doi.org/10.5961/jhes.2020.408.

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MARSHALL, TARA C., KATHRINE BEJANYAN, GAIA DI CASTRO, and RUTH A. LEE. "Attachment styles as predictors of Facebook-related jealousy and surveillance in romantic relationships." Personal Relationships 20, no. 1 (2012): 1–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6811.2011.01393.x.

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REDLICK, MADELEINE. "The green-eyed monster: Mate value, relational uncertainty, and jealousy in romantic relationships." Personal Relationships 23, no. 3 (2016): 505–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pere.12140.

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González-Rivera, Juan Aníbal, and Idania Hernández-Gato. "Conflicts in Romantic Relationships over Facebook Use: Validation and Psychometric Study." Behavioral Sciences 9, no. 2 (2019): 18. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bs9020018.

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: The present study evaluates the psychometric properties of the Conflicts in Romantic Relationships Over Facebook Use Scale with a sample of Puerto Rican adults. A total of 300 Puerto Ricans participated in this confirmatory and psychometric study. The results confirmed that the scale has a multidimensional structure. These dimensions are: Partner Facebook intrusion, Conflict over Facebook use, and Jealousy over Facebook use. A total of 18 items complied with the criteria of discrimination and presented appropriate factorial loads (six items per dimension). The Cronbach’s alpha indexes of the dimensions ranged between 0.87–0.95, and the omega coefficients ranged between 0.88–0.95. In summary, the instrument has the appropriate psychometric properties to continue with validation studies, as well as to be implemented in various work areas, both theoretical and applied.
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Abbasi, Irum Saeed. "Social Media and Committed Relationships: What Factors Make Our Romantic Relationship Vulnerable?" Social Science Computer Review 37, no. 3 (2018): 425–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0894439318770609.

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Many competing social networking websites (SNSs) have gained popularity among Internet users. SNSs offer a new way of communicating with known and unknown connections under the umbrella of “friends.” Online communications can quickly become aggressive as uninhibited users tend to exchange intimate details and are prone to developing an emotional intimacy with their online friends. Research supports that an excessive SNSs use adversely affects romantic relationships due to jealousy, envy, suspicion, surveillance, and infidelity. SNSs use is also linked to low relationship commitment due to the presence of online alternative attractions and also due to the time and emotional investments that are made outside the dyadic relationship. In the current study, we examined 252 married and romantically committed partners (167 females, 85 males) between the ages of 18 to 73 years ( M = 28.27, SD = 12.02). We explored the connection between participants’ age and SNSs addiction and also their age with the total number of SNSs accounts. We further examined whether SNSs addiction is linked to romantic relationship commitment. Lastly, we examined whether SNSs addiction is connected to the total number of SNSs accounts. The results revealed that age is significantly negatively related to SNSs addiction and the total number of accounts. Younger participants had higher SNSs addiction scores and reported having a greater number of SNSs accounts. SNSs addiction was also negatively linked to romantic relationship commitment. Finally, individuals who had higher SNSs addiction scores also reported having a greater number of SNSs accounts than those with low SNSs addiction scores. Results from the present study are pertinent and can help counselors customize a treatment plan based on SNSs users’ age and relationship status.
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43

Kanno, Yu. "Development of the Multidimensional Scale of Jealousy in Romantic Relationship." Japanese Journal of Personality 25, no. 1 (2016): 86–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.2132/personality.25.86.

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44

Hernández-Santaolalla, Víctor, and Alberto Hermida. "Malicious Social Surveillance and Negative Implications in Romantic Relationships among Undergraduates." Surveillance & Society 18, no. 3 (2020): 387–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.24908/ss.v18i3.13149.

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In the process of normalizing some surveillance dynamics in a society that has become increasingly more accustomed to infringements of privacy, citizens have been provided with a series of tools that allow them to control their peers. Thus, this paper relates interpersonal electronic surveillance to the negative implications that social networks may have for romantic relationships in the Spanish university context by analyzing three main aspects of interpersonal electronic surveillance: user perception and awareness, the types of pernicious social networking practices involved, and their consequences for romantic relationships. To achieve these objectives, a mixed methodology was used. Specifically, an in-person survey involving 311 respondents and two focus groups of seven and eight members, respectively, were conducted. All of the participants were undergraduate communication students between the ages of eighteen and twenty-six. Findings from the current study show that the respondents believed that social networks incited jealousy and promoted control and surveillance practices, thus making romantic relationships more conflictive and artificial. However, they tended to blame individual uses more than the inner workings of social networks. For instance, some respondents regretted having resorted to certain practices, while others justified those practices because they had allowed for the detection of infidelity-related behaviors. In short, in a context in which social surveillance is now the norm, the monitoring and control of partner profiles was generally accepted even though the respondents called for more education about social networking in order to curtail these pernicious practices and to maintain healthier romantic relationships.
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Atari, Mohammad, Nicole Barbaro, Todd K. Shackelford, and Razieh Chegeni. "Psychometric Evaluation and Cultural Correlates of the Mate Retention Inventory–Short Form (MRI-SF) in Iran." Evolutionary Psychology 15, no. 1 (2017): 147470491769526. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1474704917695267.

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The current study investigated the psychometric properties of the Persian translation of the Mate Retention Inventory–Short Form (MRI-SF) in Iran. We also investigated sex differences in the use of mate retention tactics and investigated the relationships between mate retention behaviors and a number of related cultural constructs. Participants ( N = 308) ranged in age from 18 to 57 years. All participants were in a committed romantic relationship, with mean relationship length of 63.5 months ( SD = 73.8). Participants completed the Persian translation of the MRI-SF and measures of religiosity, relationship satisfaction, self-esteem, and socioeconomic status. Cultural measures specific to Iran were also included, such as Mahr (for married individuals), self-perceived Qeiratiness (for men), and self-perceived jealousy (for women). Mahr is a mandatory amount of money or possessions paid or promised to be paid by the groom to the bride at the time of the marriage contract. Qeirati is a male-specific adjective in Persian meaning protective against unwanted attention toward a man’s romantic partner. Female jealousy is usually regarded the counterpart of male Qeiratiness in Iranian culture. The 19 mate retention tactics formed a two-component structure, consistent with previous research. Results demonstrate adequate internal consistency of 2-item assessments of mate retention tactics. Observed sex differences accorded with previous mate retention research and are discussed in reference to evolutionary perspectives on human mating. Several significant associations emerged between mate retention tactics and Iranian culture-specific variables and are discussed from a cross-cultural perspective.
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Park, Justin H., Martijn B. Wieling, Abraham P. Buunk, and Karlijn Massar. "Sex-specific relationship between digit ratio (2D:4D) and romantic jealousy." Personality and Individual Differences 44, no. 4 (2008): 1039–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2007.10.023.

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47

Melamed, Tuvia. "Individual differences in romantic jealousy: The moderating effect of relationship characteristics." European Journal of Social Psychology 21, no. 5 (1991): 455–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2420210508.

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48

Ha, Thao, Hanjoe Kim, and Shannon McGill. "When conflict escalates into intimate partner violence: The delicate nature of observed coercion in adolescent romantic relationships." Development and Psychopathology 31, no. 5 (2019): 1729–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0954579419001007.

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AbstractWe investigated how initial conflicts in adolescent romantic relationships escalate into serious forms of conflict, including intimate partner violence (IPV). We focused on whether adolescents’ micro-level interaction patterns, i.e., coercion and positive engagement, mediated between conflict and future IPV. The sample consisted of 91 heterosexual couples, aged 13 to 18 years (M = 16.5, SD = 0.99) from a diverse background (42% Hispanic/Latino, 42% White). Participants completed surveys about conflict at Time 1, and they participated in videotaped conflict and jealousy discussions. At Time 2, participants completed surveys about conflict and IPV, and an average daily conflict score was calculated from ecological momentary assessments. Multilevel hazard models revealed that we did not find support for dyadic coercion as a risk process leading to escalations in conflict. However, a higher likelihood of ending dyadic positive behaviors mediated between earlier levels of conflict and a latent construct of female conflict and IPV. Classic coercive dynamics may not apply to adolescent romantic relationships. Instead, not being able to reinforce levels of positivity during conflict predicted conflict and IPV as reported by females. The implications of these findings for understanding coercion in the escalation from conflict to IPV in adolescent romantic relationships are discussed.
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Kaneda, Tomoyo. "Influence of jealousy on university students in romantic relationships while their partners engage in various activities." Proceedings of the Annual Convention of the Japanese Psychological Association 79 (September 22, 2015): 2AM—125–2AM—125. http://dx.doi.org/10.4992/pacjpa.79.0_2am-125.

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Costa, Andrea Lorenada, Eglacy C. Sophia, Cíntia Sanches, Hermano Tavares, and Monica L. Zilberman. "Pathological jealousy: Romantic relationship characteristics, emotional and personality aspects, and social adjustment." Journal of Affective Disorders 174 (March 2015): 38–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2014.11.017.

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