Executive Control and Relationship Maintenance Processes Flashcards
1
Q
Introduction
A
- Long-term romantic relationships contribute to happiness and physical health.
- Relationship challenges include misaligned preferences, hurtful actions, and attractive alternatives.
- Motivational factors like commitment and relational self-construal are studied but only partially explain relationship stability.
- The article explores the role of self-regulation, specifically executive control, in maintaining romantic relationships.
2
Q
Executive Control
A
- Executive control involves inhibition, updating, and switching functions, crucial for goal-directed behavior.
- Individual differences in executive control are measured through tasks assessing inhibition, updating, and task switching.
- Executive control is associated with various self-regulation behaviors in different life domains.
3
Q
Relationship Maintenance
A
- Transformation of motivation involves shifting from immediate self-interest to broader concerns for relationship well-being.
- Three situations requiring transformation of motivation: sacrificing preferences, responding to hurtful actions, and resisting attractive alternatives.
- Executive control is proposed to play a crucial role in inhibiting self-interested impulses and promoting relationship-promoting behaviors.
4
Q
Research Approach
A
- Studies use an individual difference approach, measuring executive control capacity and examining its association with relationship-constructive responses.
- The focus is on inhibition as a central factor shaping responses requiring the inhibition of self-interested impulses.
5
Q
Empirical Findings
A
- Research findings support the idea that higher executive control is associated with more pro-relationship responses.
- Executive control is crucial for inhibiting self-interested impulses in various relationship situations.
- Acknowledgment of potential differential roles of each executive control component in relationship maintenance.
6
Q
Overview of Findings
A
- Experimental Design: Two studies involving romantically involved participants performing dull and frustrating tasks, measuring executive control.
- Task Dynamics: Participants could continue tasks, benefiting their partner, pitting immediate self-interest against partner interest.
- Results: Higher executive control linked to more time and effort on tasks, indicating a willingness to sacrifice immediate self-interest for the partner.
- Comparisons: Findings align with related studies, but differences in sacrifice associations with self-regulation capacities noted.
- Four Studies: Examined association between executive control and forgiveness in various scenarios.
- Consistent Picture: Positive correlation found between executive control and dispositional forgiveness, forgiveness regarding past offenses, and forgiveness increase over time.
- Mechanism: Executive control reduces rumination, inhibiting negative thoughts and promoting forgiveness.
- Severity Impact: Executive control facilitates forgiving responses for severe offenses, emphasizing its role in handling strong conflicts between self-interest and relationship goals.
- Temptation Handling: Executive control associated with lower difficulty staying faithful, reduced desire to meet attractive alternatives, and less flirting behavior.
- Contextual Effect: Single participants unaffected, suggesting executive control’s role in inhibiting impulses threatening long-term relationship goals.
7
Q
Integrating Motivation and Capacity
A
- Dual-Process Model: Proposes motivation and capacity (executive control) work together in relationship maintenance.
- Motivation and Capacity Interaction: Executive control likely used when motivation (relationship commitment) is high, reinforcing pro-relationship behaviors.
- Interactive Role Evidence: Studies show relationship commitment interacts with executive control, particularly in forgiving responses.
8
Q
Conclusion
A
- Pro-Relationship Acts: Motivation and capacity jointly contribute to behaviors like forgiveness, sacrifice, and resisting attractive alternatives.
- Dual-Process Importance: Dual-process models crucial in understanding how motivation and capacity interact.
- Automatic Responses: Over time, pro-relationship acts may become automatic, but executive control remains vital in conflict situations.
- Counteracting Relationship Costs: Low executive control may pose challenges, but researchers should explore potential benefits and interventions to counteract relationship costs.
Future Research Directions:
* Examine executive control’s role in various relationship aspects.
* Explore unique contributions of different executive control components.
* Investigate training effects on executive control and relationship behavior.
* Consider long-term influences of executive control on relationship satisfaction.
* Explore potential relationship benefits of low executive control.