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Impact Factor:2.515 | Ranking:Psychology, Social 7 out of 60
Source:2013 Journal Citation Reports® (Thomson Reuters, 2014)

The Experimental Generation of Interpersonal Closeness: A Procedure and Some Preliminary Findings

  1. Arthur Aron
    1. State University of New York at Stony Brook, aron{at}psychl.psy.sunysb.edu
  1. Edward Melinat
    1. California Graduate School of Family Psychology
  1. Elaine N. Aron
    1. State University of New York at Stony Brook
  1. Robert Darrin Vallone
    1. University of California, Santa Cruz
  1. Renee J. Bator
    1. Arizona State University

Abstract

A practical methodology is presented for creating closeness in an experimental context. Whether or not an individual is in a relationship, particular pairings of individuals in the relationship, and circumstances of relationship development become manipulated variables. Over a 45-min period subject pairs carry out self-disclosure and relationship-building tasks that gradually escalate in intensity. Study 1 found greater postinteraction closeness with these tasks versus comparable small-talk tasks. Studies 2 and 3 found no significant closeness effects, inspite of adequate power, for (a) whether pairs were matched for nondisagreement on important attitudes, (b) whether pairs were led to expect mutual liking, or (c) whether getting close was made an explicit goal. These studies also illustrated applications for addressing theoretical issues, yielding provocative tentative findings relating to attachment style and introversion/extraversion.

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