Title of article
Convergence and divergence among multiple methods for assessing adolescent romantic relationships
Author/Authors
Galliher، نويسنده , , Renee V. and Enno، نويسنده , , Angela M. and Wright، نويسنده , , Robert، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
23
From page
747
To page
769
Abstract
The problem solving conversations of 92 adolescent romantic couples were analyzed using two innovative techniques for capturing the meaning-making processes in couples’ interactions. Couples were coded using the narrative coding system developed by the Family Narrative Consortium [Fiese, B. H. & Sameroff, A. J. (Eds.), (1999). The stories that families tell: Narrative coherence, narrative interaction, and relationship beliefs. With commentary from Philip A. Cowan. Monographs of the Society for Research on Child Development, 64(2, serial no. 257)], yielding measures of narrative coherence for each couple member and an assessment of couples’ capacity to engage in the interaction in a coordinated and mutually respectful manner. In addition, a video-recall procedure captured couple members’ own subjective understanding of their own and their partners’ behaviors during the interaction. Moderate associations were observed between trained coders’, boyfriends’, and girlfriends’ perspectives, with more consistent links in some domains between girlfriends’ ratings and observers’ codes. In addition, indices of the quality of the interaction were linked to couple member global self reports of both positive and negative relationship quality, with many associations between observed interaction and global self reports of relationship quality achieving moderate effect sizes.
Keywords
Romantic relationship quality , Adolescent romantic relationships , Observational methodology
Journal title
Journal of Adolescence
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Journal of Adolescence
Record number
1495294
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