Support Processes in Intimate Relationships
In the past twenty years or so, research on support processes in relationships has emerged as a distinct development in the field. Researchers have drawn from studies in the fields of communication, social support, and intimate relationships to conduct research examining support processes in relationships on micro and macro levels. Theoretical models of support processes in intimate relationships have been developed and increasingly sophisticated methodologies and data analytic techniques are being used to accumulate considerable and convincing evidence of the importance and complexity of support processes in intimate relationships. This edited book offers a broad yet coherent view of the field, showcasing novel, state-of-the-art research and theory on support processes in intimate relationships. Cutting-edge scholarly work is compiled in one accessible volume, which is designed to provoke and guide new research on social support. The book is divided into five sections designed to reflect emerging themes in the literature on support processes and intimate relationships. "Getting What One Wants: Perceived Support in Intimate Relationships" highlights the importance of offering support that is consistent with the needs of the recipient. "Providing What Partners Need: Interpersonal Aspects of Support" focuses on the importance of empathic understanding, validation of support seekers' needs, attachment styles, and the emotional context for effective support provision. "Complexities of Support Processes in Individual and Couple Well Being" highlights the complex nature of support, presenting research on the effects of partner support on coping with stress, differential responses to daily support, and the importance of providing support for positive events. "Support in the Context of Health-related Problems and Behaviors" is comprised of chapters describing the effects of support on health, illness, and injury. Finally, "Culture and Gender" presents research that explores the role of gender and culture in support processes in couples.
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Support Processes in Intimate Relationships
In the past twenty years or so, research on support processes in relationships has emerged as a distinct development in the field. Researchers have drawn from studies in the fields of communication, social support, and intimate relationships to conduct research examining support processes in relationships on micro and macro levels. Theoretical models of support processes in intimate relationships have been developed and increasingly sophisticated methodologies and data analytic techniques are being used to accumulate considerable and convincing evidence of the importance and complexity of support processes in intimate relationships. This edited book offers a broad yet coherent view of the field, showcasing novel, state-of-the-art research and theory on support processes in intimate relationships. Cutting-edge scholarly work is compiled in one accessible volume, which is designed to provoke and guide new research on social support. The book is divided into five sections designed to reflect emerging themes in the literature on support processes and intimate relationships. "Getting What One Wants: Perceived Support in Intimate Relationships" highlights the importance of offering support that is consistent with the needs of the recipient. "Providing What Partners Need: Interpersonal Aspects of Support" focuses on the importance of empathic understanding, validation of support seekers' needs, attachment styles, and the emotional context for effective support provision. "Complexities of Support Processes in Individual and Couple Well Being" highlights the complex nature of support, presenting research on the effects of partner support on coping with stress, differential responses to daily support, and the importance of providing support for positive events. "Support in the Context of Health-related Problems and Behaviors" is comprised of chapters describing the effects of support on health, illness, and injury. Finally, "Culture and Gender" presents research that explores the role of gender and culture in support processes in couples.
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Support Processes in Intimate Relationships

Support Processes in Intimate Relationships

Support Processes in Intimate Relationships

Support Processes in Intimate Relationships

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Overview

In the past twenty years or so, research on support processes in relationships has emerged as a distinct development in the field. Researchers have drawn from studies in the fields of communication, social support, and intimate relationships to conduct research examining support processes in relationships on micro and macro levels. Theoretical models of support processes in intimate relationships have been developed and increasingly sophisticated methodologies and data analytic techniques are being used to accumulate considerable and convincing evidence of the importance and complexity of support processes in intimate relationships. This edited book offers a broad yet coherent view of the field, showcasing novel, state-of-the-art research and theory on support processes in intimate relationships. Cutting-edge scholarly work is compiled in one accessible volume, which is designed to provoke and guide new research on social support. The book is divided into five sections designed to reflect emerging themes in the literature on support processes and intimate relationships. "Getting What One Wants: Perceived Support in Intimate Relationships" highlights the importance of offering support that is consistent with the needs of the recipient. "Providing What Partners Need: Interpersonal Aspects of Support" focuses on the importance of empathic understanding, validation of support seekers' needs, attachment styles, and the emotional context for effective support provision. "Complexities of Support Processes in Individual and Couple Well Being" highlights the complex nature of support, presenting research on the effects of partner support on coping with stress, differential responses to daily support, and the importance of providing support for positive events. "Support in the Context of Health-related Problems and Behaviors" is comprised of chapters describing the effects of support on health, illness, and injury. Finally, "Culture and Gender" presents research that explores the role of gender and culture in support processes in couples.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190452292
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 06/11/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Kieran Sullivan received her PhD from UCLA in 1997 and is an Associate Professor of Psychology at Santa Clara University. She has published in the areas of prevention for relationship distress and violence, social support in marriage, couple therapy, and religiosity and marriage. Her current research focuses on support, control and health behavior in intimate relationships and on the longitudinal effects of support in newlwed marriage. Dr. Sullivan is a licensed clinial psychologist. Joanne Davila received her PhD from UCLA in 1993 and is an Associate Professor of Psychology at Stony Brook University. She has published widely in the areas of adolescent and adult psychopathology and interpersonal functioning, particularly romantic relationships. She is the Director of the Relationship Development Center at Stony Brook University, where her current research focuses on how depression and anxiety can impair romantic functioning, particularly in adolescence, and on how attachment security develops and changes over time and relationships. Dr. Davila has served on the editorial boards of numerous psychology journals and as an Associate Editor at the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. She is a licensed clinical psychologist.

Table of Contents

Foreword Thomas N. Bradbury Introduction Kieran Sullivan and Joanne Davila Section 1: Getting what one wants: Perceived support in close relationships 1. Support Adequacy in Marriage: Observing the Platinum Rule Rebecca L. Brock and Erika Lawrence 2. The Effectiveness of Social Support Attempts in Intimate Relationships: 'T ain't what you do, it's the way that you do it” Christine Rini and Christine Dunkel Schetter Section 2: Providing what partners' need: Interpersonal aspects of support 3. “I Know What You Need Right Now”: Empathic Accuracy and Support Provision in Marriage Lesley L. Verhofstadt, William Ickes, and Ann Buysse 4. An attachment theoretical perspective on social support dynamics in couples: Normative processes and individual differences Nancy L. Collins and Brooke C. Feeney 5. Accurate Expression and Validating Responses: A Transactional Model for Understanding Individual and Relationship Distress Alan E. Fruzzetti and John M. Worrall Section 3: Complexities of support processes in individual and couple well being 6. Spousal Support and Dyadic Coping in Times of Stress Anita DeLongis, Susan Holtzman, Eli Puterman, and Mark Lam 7. The Effects of Daily Support Transactions During Acute Stress: Results From a Diary Study of Bar Exam Preparation Patrick E. Shrout, Niall Bolger, Masumi Iida, Christopher Burke, Marci E. J. Gleason, and Sean P. Lane 8. Being there when things go right: Support processes for positive events Shelly L. Gable and Sara Algoe Section 4: Support in the context of health-related problems and behaviors 9. Social Support, Social Control and Health Behavior Change in Spouses Kieran Sullivan, Lauri Pasch, Kathrine Bejanyan, and Katherine Hanson 10. Intimate Relationships and Cancer Sharon Manne and Hoda Badr 11. Social support after a partner's traumatic injury: Situational, relationship, and individual difference predictors Natalya C. Maisel, Amy J. Rauer, Grant N. Marshall, and Benjamin R. Karney Section 5: Cultural and gender-based aspects of support 12. Explaining Cultural and Sex Differences in Responses to Supportive Communication: A Dual-Process Approach Brant R. Burleson and Lisa K. Hanasono 13. Social Networks and Marital Stability among Black American and White American Couples Edna Brown, Terri L. Orbuch, and Artie Maharaj 14. Daily Support Across Cultural Contexts: A Comparison of Daily Support Experiences of Young Families in Four Cultural Contexts Dominik Schoebi, Zhiyun Wang, Valentin Ababkov, and Meinrad Perrez Conclusions: Bringing the field together and moving forward Joanne Davila and Kieran Sullivan
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