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Automatic and Self-Reported Attitudes in Romantic RelationshipsNevada State College, tony.scinta{at}nsc.nevada.edu
University of California, Santa Barbara Two studies used response latency measures to assess automatic attitudes that individuals are unwilling or unable to reveal about their partners. In Study 1, participants (n = 51) in dating relationships completed two response latency measures (Time 1) and several relationship self-reports (Times 1 and 2). Participants who faced high barriers to exiting (BTE) their relationship generally showed a negative association between their relationship self-reports and automatic attitudes, and there was some evidence that automatic attitudes at Time 1 predicted relationship satisfaction at Time 2. Study 2 (n = 41 couples) replicated the BTE finding and showed that image-based response latency measures may assess automatic attitudes more effectively than word-based measures. A negative correlation between self-reported and automatic attitudes among high-BTE participants suggests that they may overreport relationship positivity to quell feelings of doubt about a relationship they cannot feasibly dissolve.
Key Words: implicit automatic attitudes romantic relationships intimate
This version was published on July
1, 2007 Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Vol. 33, No. 7,
1008-1022 (2007) |
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