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Lecture 10

Lecture 10. Attraction, Affiliation and Love. Outline. Attraction and Liking Love Attachment Equity Theory Interpersonal Communication Relationship Dissolution. Factors Influencing Attraction. Propinquity - Proximity Mere-exposure effect Similarity Reciprocal Positive Evaluations

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Lecture 10

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  1. Lecture 10 Attraction, Affiliation and Love

  2. Outline • Attraction and Liking • Love • Attachment • Equity Theory • Interpersonal Communication • Relationship Dissolution

  3. Factors Influencing Attraction • Propinquity - Proximity • Mere-exposure effect • Similarity • Reciprocal Positive Evaluations • Physical Attractiveness

  4. Proximity - Quote 1a Contrary to popular belief, I do not believe that friends are necessarily the people you like best, they are merely the people who got there first - Sir Peter Ustinov, 1977

  5. Proximity - Quote 1b When I’m not near the one I love, I love the one I’m near - E. Y. Harburg, 1947

  6. Propinquity (Proximity) A powerful predictor of friendship is geographical nearness - Proximity kindles liking Actually it is not geographical distance that is critical but “functional distance”

  7. Mere-exposure effect The tendency for novel stimuli to be more liked after repeated exposures Do people like the Mona Lisa or is it a familiar face? To know her is to like her Can we use this to get people to like us?

  8. Frequency of Exposure and Liking in the Classroom (from Moreland & Beach, 1992) Attraction Rating # of Times the RA came to Class

  9. Similarity We like people that are similar to us Newcomb (1961) – Dormitory Study People who are similar provide social validation of beliefs We assume it will be enjoyable to spend time with those who are similar to us

  10. ‘Birds of a feather’ or‘Opposites attract’ • Demographics • Personality • Two warm people or two cold people • Dominance vs. Submissive • Physical Attractiveness • Folkes (1982) – dating service study

  11. Another Quote The average man is more interested in a woman who is interested in him than he is in a woman with beautiful legs - Marlene Dietrich (1901-1992)

  12. Reciprocal Liking • We like to be liked • We like those who like us Curtis & Miller (1986) Participants in Pairs Told target that other participant doesn’t like them

  13. Attractiveness – Quotes 2 IT IS ONLY SHALLOW PEOPLE WHO DO NOT JUDGE BY APPEARANCE - Oscar Wilde, 1891

  14. Effects of Attractiveness on Liking Buss & Barnes (1986) Asked university students what qualities they want in a mate

  15. Effects of Attractiveness on Liking II Walster (Hatfield) and colleagues (1966) • University of Minnesota dance (N = 752) • Battery of personality test • Blind Date (Not the TV show)

  16. What is Beautiful is Good Stereotypes: What are they? Snyder, Tanke, & Berscheid (1977)

  17. Test of the “No one is Ugly After 2 a.m. Hypothesis” Pennebaker et al. (1979) “How attractive are the men/women here tonight?”

  18. What is Love? “Love is something so divine, Description would but make it less; ‘Tis what I feel, but can’t define, ‘Tis what I know, but can’t express.” - Beilby Porteus

  19. Zick Rubin (1970) The Love Scale 3 Factors: • Attachment • Caring • Intimacy

  20. Companionate vs. Passionate Love • Companionate Love • The affection we feel for those with whom our lives are deeply intertwined • Passionate Love • A state of intense longing for union with another. Passionate lovers are absorbed in one another, feel ecstatic at attaining their partner’s love, and are disconsolate on losing it.

  21. Companionate vs. Passionate Love Driscoll et al (1972) Brehm (1985) - Love continuum Fehr (1988) – Young adults view of love

  22. Companionate vs. Passionate Love Passionate love tends to cool after a period • leading cause of divorce Gupta & Singh (1982) – Love Marriages vs. Arranged Marriages

  23. Eros passionate physical appearance Ludus game-playing no commitment Storge friendship slow-moving to commitment Mania possessive obsessive Agape altruistic gentle, caring, dutiful Pragma pragmatic match on vital statistics Love Styles (Hendrick & Hendrick, 1992)

  24. The Triangular Theory of Love (Sternberg, 1988) Commitment Passion Intimacy

  25. Attachment • Parent-child relationships • Secure • Characterized by trust, a lack of concern with being abandoned and the view that one is worthy and well liked • Avoidant • Characterized by a suppression of attachment needs • Anxious/ambivalent • Characterized by a concern that others will not reciprocate one’s desire for intimacy, resulting in higher-than-average levels of anxiety

  26. Attachment • 2 Kinds of Avoidant Attachment (Bartholomew, 1990; Bartholomew & Horowitz, 1991) • Fearful Avoidant • Characterized by avoidance of close relationships because of mistrust and fears of being hurt • Dismissive Avoidant • Characterized by claims of self-sufficiency and no need for close relationships

  27. Maintaining Relationships • Social Exchange Theory • Interpersonal Communication • The Role of Positive Illusions

  28. Quote “What, after all, is our life but a great dance in which we are all trying to fix the best going rate if exchange?” • Malcolm Bradbury, 1992

  29. Social Exchange/Equity Theory • Equity • A condition in which the outcomes (i.e. rewards) people receive from a relationship are proportional to what they contribute to it (i.e., costs; cf. reward/cost ratio) • Comparison level • People’s expectations about the level of rewards and costs (punishment) they deserve in a relationship.

  30. Quotes “What is a friends? I will tell you. It is a person with whom you dare to be yourself.” - Frank Crane

  31. Interpersonal Communication • Self-disclosure • The act of deliberately revealing significant, personal information about oneself that would not normally be known. • Dimensions of self-disclosure • Breadth (quantity) of information • Depth (intimacy) of information

  32. Role of Positive Illusion Love is blind • Idealization of our romantic partners in order to maintain the relationship Murray & Holmes (1993) Study 1: asked if partner tended to initiate conflicts Study2: asked to list similarities and differences

  33. Why Relationships End “To marry a woman you love and who loves you is to lay a wager with her as to who will stop loving the other first.” - Alfred Capus

  34. Relationship Dissolution • Conflict in Relationships • Who is more likely to report problems? A. What are your partners character flaws? B. Research on Co-habiting couples C. Literature on Divorce

  35. Predictors of Relationship Failure Rubin, Peplau, & Hill (1981) Followed 231 dating couples. After 2 yrs 103 couple broke up. Finding • Best predictor:Unhappiness of female

  36. The Happiness Continuum Married men  Single women  Married women  Single men

  37. Relationship Dissolution Accounts of relationship Dissolution Three types:

  38. Relationship Dissolution Who is more negatively effected? Male or Female? Breaker or Breakee?

  39. Relationship Dissolution How do people react? Sadness, anger, and some people obsess? - Why do people obsess?

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