Colin McKenna’s scientific contributions

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Publications (2)


Couples' shared participation in novel and arousing activities and experienced relationship quality
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2000

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27,227 Reads

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342 Citations

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Arthur Aron

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Richard E. Heyman

Using a newspaper questionnaire, a door-to-door survey, and 3 laboratory experiments, the authors examined a proposed effect of shared participation in novel and arousing activities on experienced relationship quality. The questionnaire and survey studies found predicted correlations of reported shared "exciting" activities and relationship satisfaction plus their predicted mediation by relationship boredom. In all 3 experiments, the authors found predicted greater increases in experienced relationship quality from before to after participating together in a 7-min novel and arousing (vs. a more mundane) task. Comparison with a no-activity control showed the effect was due to the novel-arousing task. The same effect was found on ratings of videotaped discussions before and after the experimental task. Finally, all results remained after controlling for relationship social desirability. Results bear on general issues of boredom and excitement in relationships and the role of such processes in understanding the typical early decline of relationship quality after the honeymoon period.

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Couples' Shared Participation in Novel and Arousing Activities and Experienced Relationship Quality

February 2000

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37 Reads

·

267 Citations

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Using a newspaper questionnaire, a door-to-door survey, and 3 laboratory experiments, the authors examined a proposed effect of shared participation in novel and arousing activities on experienced relationship quality. The questionnaire and survey studies found predicted correlations of reported shared “exciting” activities and relationship satisfaction plus their predicted mediation by relationship boredom. In all 3 experiments, the authors found predicted greater increases in experienced relationship quality from before to after participating together in a 7-min novel and arousing (vs. a more mundane) task. Comparison with a no-activity control showed the effect was due to the novel–arousing task. The same effect was found on ratings of videotaped discussions before and after the experimental task. Finally, all results remained after controlling for relationship social desirability. Results bear on general issues of boredom and excitement in relationships and the role of such processes in understanding the typical early decline of relationship quality after the honeymoon period.

Citations (2)


... Across marriages and friendships, affection was associated with self-and other-oriented positive emotional experiences, consistent with a relative blending of positive emotional states (Cowen & Keltner, 2017;Fredrickson, 1998). Specifically, affection was linked with compassion -aligning with an emotion family of "love" (Chung et al., 2022); amusement -underscoring the importance of humor and playfulness in close relationships (Brauer et al., 2021;Horn et al., 2019); and excitement -hinting at the role of positive activation in pair bonding (Aron et al., 2000). Affection showed few associations with negative emotions except for moderate, negative correlations with anger. ...

Reference:

Unraveling the Experience of Affection Across Marital and Friendship Interactions
Couples' Shared Participation in Novel and Arousing Activities and Experienced Relationship Quality

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

... The use of Self-determination theory (SDT) is highly relevant to the study of VLs where intrinsic motivation meets interactive, technology-enhanced learning experiences. SDT posits that optimal functioning and well-being are direct consequences of satisfying three basic psychological needs: autonomy, competence, and relatedness (Aron et al., 2000). VLs, especially in the context of the recent pandemic, have demonstrated their potential in ensuring continuity in teaching and learning, providing alternative ways for skill training from home (Radhamani et al., 2021). ...

Couples' shared participation in novel and arousing activities and experienced relationship quality

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology