The study presented in this chapter adopted a dyadic approach to investigate couples’ coping with daily situations. It analyzed the role of perceived partner responses to negative events as well as to positive events occurring in partners’ everyday lives. The first aim was to analyze whether and how partners’ perceptions of the other’s typical, dispositional responses of dyadic coping and capitalization were associated over time, specifically testing for the direction of effects. A second objective of the study was to examine whether partners’ trust mediated the longitudinal associations between the two processes.
Donato, S., Pagani, A. F., Parise, M., Bertoni, A. M. M., Iafrate, R., Through thick and thin: Perceived partner responses to negative and positive events, in Bertoni, A., Donato, S., Molgora, S. (ed.), When "we" are stressed: A dyadic approach to coping with stressful events, Nova Science Publishers, Hauppauge, NY 2018: 41- 64 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/116927]
Through thick and thin: Perceived partner responses to negative and positive events
Donato, Silvia;Pagani, Ariela Francesca;Parise, Miriam;Bertoni, Anna Marta Maria;Iafrate, Raffaella
2018
Abstract
The study presented in this chapter adopted a dyadic approach to investigate couples’ coping with daily situations. It analyzed the role of perceived partner responses to negative events as well as to positive events occurring in partners’ everyday lives. The first aim was to analyze whether and how partners’ perceptions of the other’s typical, dispositional responses of dyadic coping and capitalization were associated over time, specifically testing for the direction of effects. A second objective of the study was to examine whether partners’ trust mediated the longitudinal associations between the two processes.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.