| Literature DB >> 23874321 |
Sarah Weusthoff1, Brian R Baucom, Kurt Hahlweg.
Abstract
A multitude of factors contribute to why and how romantic relationships are formed as well as whether they ultimately succeed or fail. Drawing on evolutionary models of attraction and speech production as well as integrative models of relationship functioning, this review argues that paralinguistic cues (more specifically the fundamental frequency of the voice) that are initially a strong source of attraction also increase couples' risk for relationship failure. Conceptual similarities and differences between the multiple operationalizations and interpretations of vocal fundamental frequency are discussed and guidelines are presented for understanding both convergent and non-convergent findings. Implications for clinical practice and future research are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: attraction; communication; conflict; couples; emotional arousal; fundamental frequency; romantic relationships
Year: 2013 PMID: 23874321 PMCID: PMC3710992 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00439
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Methodological details of interaction studies reviewed.
| Study | participants and communication setting | design and independent measures (covariates) | dependent measures | relevant findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 130 heterosexual, US-American couples in a couple therapy study; conflict discussion with spouse in laboratory (10 min) | longitudinal; sociodemographics, intrapersonal predictors, communication behavior, interpersonal predictors; all assessed at pre-treatment | response to treatment 2 years after treatment termination (deteriorated, unchanged, improved, recovered) | Across therapies, lower levels of wives’ f0 range linked to a higher likelihood for being in recovered category at the two-year follow-up. | |
| heterosexual, US-American couples ( | cross-sectional; mean f0, relationship satisfaction, influence tactics | demand/withdraw behavior and role | Higher levels of demand/withdraw-behavior were independently linked to higher levels of mean f0 across gender. Demanders experienced higher levels of mean f0, compared to withdrawers. | |
| 49 heterosexual, German couples participating in couple-relationship education (CRE); conflict discussion with spouse in laboratory (15 min) | longitudinal; f0 range (biological sex, relationship satisfaction) | number of skills taught in the program remembered 11 years after participation in CRE by spouses | Higher levels of pre-training f0 range were associated with fewer skills remembered 11 years after the training. Women remembered more skills than men. | |
| 67 heterosexual, German couples participating in CRE; conflict discussion with spouse in laboratory (15 min) | cross-sectional; psychophysiology, communication behavior, biological sex | f0 range | Higher levels of f0 range significantly linked to higher levels of physiological arousal, more negative and less positive communication behavior, and being female | |
| 68 heterosexual, German couples participating in CRE; conflict discussion with spouse in laboratory (15 min) | longitudinal; f0 range, relationship satisfaction, psychophysiology, communication behavior, depressive symptoms | relationship status 11 years after participation in CRE | For females, higher levels of f0 range significantly linked to a higher risk for relationship dissolution. For males, higher levels of diastolic blood pressure linked to higher risk for relationship dissolution. |