Attraction and Close Relationships
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Transcript Attraction and Close Relationships
ATTRACTION AND CLOSE
RELATIONSHIPS
Chapter 9
Need for Affiliation
Desire to establish and maintain social contact
with other
Factors that Influence Affiliation Needs
Evolution
Biology
Culture
Gender
Loneliness
A feeling of deprivation
about existing social
relations
60
50
Shyness
Percentage
40
Describe Self 30
as Shy
20
10
0
United
States
Israel
Germany
Taiwan
Japan
Situational Factors that Trigger Affiliation
Needs
The Proximity Effect
Familiarity
The
mere exposure effect
Anxiety
Schachter’s
anxiety research
Physical Attractiveness
Bias for beauty is pervasive
What-is-beautiful-is-good
stereotype: Tendency to
associate physical
attractiveness with other
desirable qualities.
Physical Attractiveness
Beauty is
an
objective
quality.
Physical Attractiveness
Beauty is
a
subjective
quality.
Situational factors influencing perceptions of
beauty
First Encounters
Liking other who are similar
Demographics
Attitudes
Bryne’s Two Step Model of Attraction
First Encounters
Liking others who are similar
Physical attractiveness
The matching hypothesis
The complementarity hypothesis
Reciprocity
Mate Selection
Evolutionary Perspective
Sociocultural Perspective
Figure 9.6: Evolutionary Mate
Preferences: Theory and Practice
Intimate Relationships
Social exchange theory
Intimate Relationships
Equity Theory
Your Benefits
Your Contributions
=
Your Partner’s Benefits
Your Partner’s Contributions
Types of Relationships
Exchange vs Communal
Attachment styles
Anxious
Avoidant
Secure
Sternberg’s Triangular Theory of Love
Passionate Love
Romantic love characterized by
high arousal, intense attraction
and fear of rejection.
Excitation transfer: the process
whereby arousal caused by one
stimulus is added to the arousal
from a second stimulus and the
combined arousal is attributed to
the second stimulus.
Companionate Love
A secure, trusting, stable
partnership.
Is the diminution of
passion genetically predetermined?
Self-disclosure: sharing
intimate facts and
feeling.
From a Sliver to a Wedge
Theory of Social Penetration
Relationship Issues
The Marriage Trajectory
Are married people happier than unmarried
people?
Lucas, Clark & Diener (2003): 15 year study of over
24,000 individuals living in Germany
John Gottman
The Gottman Relationship Institute:
http://www.gottman.com/49847/The-Love-Lab.html#sf