psychology4 papersavg year 2010quality 7/5weak evidence

Growing evidence shows that perceived partner responsiveness is a central relationship process predicting well-being in Western contexts but little is known about whether this association generalizes

Research gap analysis derived from 4 psychology papers in our local library.

The gap

Growing evidence shows that perceived partner responsiveness is a central relationship process predicting well-being in Western contexts but little is known about whether this association generalizes to other countries.

Consensus across the literature

Clustered from 4 gap mentions across 4 papers via embedding cosine ≥ 0.62.

Research trend

Established — well-defined area with open sub-problems.

Supporting evidence — 4 representative gaps

  • Conflict Resolution Styles in Gay, Lesbian, Heterosexual Nonparent, and Heterosexual Parent Couples (1994) · doi

    The availability of psychometrically sound self-report and partner-report measures of conflict resolution would help address this limitation by providing researchers with one method by which the link between conflict resolution and both relationship maintenance and relationship dissolution could be studied in large, representative samples.

    Keywords: report conflict resolution relationship availability psychometrically sound self partner measures help address limitation providing researchers
  • Conflict and love: Predicting newlywed marital outcomes from two interaction contexts. (2011) · doi

    The present longitudinal study begins to address this gap in the literature by directly comparing newlywed behaviors from a conflict-resolution interaction with those from a love-paradigm interaction to predict relationship satisfaction and divorce proneness approximately 15 months later.

    Keywords: interaction present longitudinal begins address literature directly comparing newlywed behaviors conflict resolution love paradigm predict
  • Patterns of perceived partner responsiveness and well-being in Japan and the United States. (2018) · doi

    Growing evidence shows that perceived partner responsiveness is a central relationship process predicting well-being in Western contexts but little is known about whether this association generalizes to other countries.

    Keywords: growing evidence shows perceived partner responsiveness central relationship process predicting well western contexts little known
  • Conflict, negative emotion, and reports of partners’ relationship maintenance in same-sex couples. (2015) · doi

    The literature on relationship maintenance has focused primarily on the beneficial outcomes of maintenance, and, as a result, little is known about relational processes that may interfere with reports of partners' maintenance.

    Keywords: maintenance literature relationship focused primarily beneficial outcomes result little known relational processes interfere reports partners

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