W10 STRESS, CONFLICT & VIOLENCE Flashcards

1
Q

What is the relationship context?

A

The relationship “context” begins when the dyad ends
- Physical environment
- Social environment
- Things that happen to each other outside of the relationship (which includes stress)

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2
Q

How does stress affect relationships?

A

External stress forces couples to spend resources on coping, yet at the very same time, stress renders support processes ineffective (maladaptive/adaptive)

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3
Q

What is a stressor and types of stressors?

A

Stressor: An aspect of the environment of a couple that makes demands on the partners

Can be chronic or acute
- Chronic: Stable and enduring (e.g. poverty);
- Acute: Clear onset and endpoint (e.g. LDR)

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4
Q

What are resources?

A

Resources: Sources of support for the couple (inside/outside)

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5
Q

What is the VSA model?

A

Vulnerability-Stress-Adaptation Model
3 factors contributing to (in)stability: enduring vulnerabilities, adaptive processes, stressful events

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6
Q

What is stress spillover vs crossover?

A

Stress spillover: The experience of stress outside the relationship affects one’s experiences in the relationship
- E.g., A’s work stress→A’s relationship thoughts and behaviours

Stress crossover: The experience of stress outside the relationship affects one’s partner’s experiences in the relationship
- E.g., A’s work stress→ B’s relationship thoughts and behaviours

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7
Q

W10 research: Stress spillover and self-regulatory depletion

What is the main finding of this paper?

A
  1. Stress spillover was observed:
    On days when their stress was higher than usual, participants reported enacting more negative behaviours toward their partner and endorsed less positive appraisals of the relationship
  2. Self-regulatory depletion accounted for majority of these spillover effects
  • Don’t need to know equations, but on the days on which you feel more stress → more stress spillover → more negative appraisal → less satisfaction
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8
Q

W10 research: Stress spillover and self-regulatory depletion

What is self regulatory depletion?

A

Depletion of resources that we use to regulate ourselves/ control our thoughts and behaviours

Resources are finite; using self-regulatory resources to deal with stressors means less resources to
(1) inhibit negative thoughts and behaviours wrt relationship, and
(2) make decisions to engage in relationship-enhancing thoughts and behaviours

But it doesn’t mean that you’re not strong!

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9
Q

W10 research: Stress spillover and self-regulatory depletion

How do you think we can cope with stress spillover?

A
  1. Ask for solitude
  2. Communicate/Ask for understanding from partner
  3. Reappraise stress as challenges, not threats
  4. Therapy
  5. Sleep
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10
Q

What model shows the effects of stess?

A

Two-Route Model
1. external stress > creates additional relationship problems > diminished relationship satisfaction

  1. external stress > hinders constructive response to problems > diminished relationship satisfaction
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11
Q

What is conflict?

A

Conflict can be defined as a discord or clash arising between interdependent people due to the presence of scarce resources, incompatible goals, or perceived interference, leading to a state of negative affect reciprocity where emotions and reactions intensify within the relationship or interaction.

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12
Q

How can conflict be understood?

A
  1. Frequency
  2. Topics discussed
  3. Course of conflict
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13
Q

What is frequency of conflict linked to?

A

(1) Personality: high neuroticism → more conflict, high agreeable → less conflict
(2) Attachment Style: anxiety > abandonment makes conflict more threatening and frequent
(3) Stage of Life: older couples have fewer conflicts than younger couples do
(4) Similarity: the less similar partners are to each other → more conflict
(5) Alcohol: intoxication exacerbates conflict (fuel to fire)

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14
Q

What are topics that are most susceptible to conflict?

A
  1. CARING FOR AND DISCIPLINING CHILDREN
  2. CHORES
  3. COMMUNICATION DEFICIENCIES
  4. LEISURE-RELATED DISAGREEMENTS
  5. WORK-RELATED DISAGREEMENTS
  6. MONEY ISSUES
  7. ANNOYING HABITS
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15
Q

What is the eventual course/responses of conflict?

A

Responses to conflict are either active/passive, constructive/destructive

Leads to
1. Exit
2. Neglect
3. Loyal
4. Voice

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16
Q

What is the relationship between power and CLalt?

A

CLalt puts a lower limit on the outcomes one would tolerate in a relationship

If outcome dips below CLalt, one is likely to leave the relationship to pursue the alternative (partner has lower power)

Principle of least interest - person who is less emotionally invested or less dependent on the relationship holds more power or influence within that relationship.

17
Q

What was the Goal Conversation Study about and what were the results?

A

POWER AND AGGRESSION
- Heterosexual couples engaged in video recorded conversation about most important personal goals, and were coded for aggression

  • Participants had previously reported their relationship power before AND situational power after on how needy they felt
  • Results: Men (not women) were more aggressive when low in both types of power
18
Q

What is violence?

A

Violence involves acts carried out with the intention of physically hurting another person. Violent acts range from little harm (i.e. grabbing/pushing) to inflicting atrocious injury

19
Q

What does research show regarding norms of what is considered abusive?

A

People judge physical abuse as unacceptable, but psychological abuse as tolerated even though it’s judged as negative

20
Q

What is the I-Cubed theory?

A

Theory presents a structure by which aggression can be predicted:
1. Instigating Forces - situational factors that induce aggression (i.e. conflict, betrayal, direct provocation, goal obstruction, rejection)
2. Impelling Forces - factors that determine the strength of the aggressive impulse (i.e. narcissism, testosterone, jealousy, high temperature, neuroticism)
3. Inhibiting Forces - factors that reduce tendencies to aggress (i.e. self-control, beliefs that aggression leads to poor outcomes, being sober, thoughtful)

High, high, low leads to Intimate Partner Violence (IPV)

21
Q

What research study is associated with I-Cubed theory? What were the results?

A

Voodoo Doll Study
- Participants completed nightly survey for 35 consecutive nights
- Voodoo Doll task - number of pins (aggression)
- Instigation: level of provocation today
- Impellance: trait aggressiveness
- Inhibition: executive control (Stroop performance > faster response means higher inhibition)

Results (found…)
- Effect of inhibition when instigation/impellence high
- Effect of impellence when instigation strong & inhibition weak
- Effect of instigation when impellence strong & inhibition weak

22
Q

What is the theory behind why people don’t people leave abusive relationships?

A

Investment Model:
Investments + CLalt > Commitment > Decision to Stay/Leave

23
Q

What are psychological mechanisms that keep people STUCK?

A
  1. Non-Voluntary Dependence → “The thought of how my partner would handle a break up frightens me”
  2. Affective Forecasting → “How happy would you be if you left the relationship?”
  3. Focalism & Immune Neglect → Individuals prefer known and imperfect path over the unknown
24
Q

What are the psychological mechanisms of MANAGING an abusive relationship?

A
  1. Adopting more tolerant standards (Common aggression viewed as more normal/less of a dealbreaker, especially when one is highly committed)
  2. Minimising/denying partner’s abuse
  3. Blaming oneself or things beyond partner’s control
  4. Re-appraising things as jokes when actual abuse happens