Commitment - a romantic partners intention or desire to continue a relationship
Satisfaction - the extent to which romantic partners feel the rewards of a relationship exceed the costs
Comparison with alternatives - a judgement that partners make concerning whether a relationship with a different partner would bring more rewards and future costs
Investment - the resources associated with a romantic relationship which partners would lose if their relationship were to end
According to Rusbult et al (2011), commitment depends on three factors
Is a development of social exchange theory
Factors of Rusbult's Investment model:
Satisfaction
Comparison with alternatives
Investment
A satisfying relationship is judged by comparing rewards and costs, and the relationship is considered good if the costs are less than the rewards
getting more than what they expect based on previous experience and social norms
Comparison with alternatives - romantic partners asking themselves whether their needs could be better met in a different relationship
Investment - Rusbult realised that CL and CLalt from SET are not enough to explain commitment as if they were then many more relationships would end soon - therefore there must be a crucial 3rd factor that influences commitment
An investment is anything we stand to lose if the relationship was to end
Types of investment:
Intrinsic Investments - put directly into the relationship (e.g. money or emotion)
Extrinsic investment - resources that previously did not feature but are now closely associated with it ( e.g. children or memories)
Rusbult et al (2011) - commitment is the main psychological factor that causes people to stay in a relationship and satisfaction is a contributory factor
dissatisfied partners may choose to stay in a relationship because they are committed due to investments made
PEEL 1:
Strengths - the model is an explanation of relationships that involve intimate partner violence - people were dissatisfied with their relationship but still committed - model shows that satisfaction on its own can't explain why people stay in relationships
PEEL 2:
Limitation - views investment in a simplistic - Goodfriend and Agnew suggest that in early stages, partners may have few actual investments but extended the original model to future plans
failes to recognise the true complexity of investment
PEEL 3:
Limitation - Self -report techniques that the models supporting research is based on can have bias
Le and Agnew (2003) - a meta-analysis of 52 studies comprising a total of 11,000 participants from 5 countries which concluded that satisfaction, CLalt and investment size all predicted commitment
PEEL 4:
Strength - supporting research - Le and Agnew used a large sample and quantitative data which means that the findings are robust and able to withstand statistical analysis which in turn increases their reliability