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Psych P3
relationship
theories of romantic relaltionships - SET
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Cards (15)
social exchange theory:
assumes that romantic partners act out of self-interest in echanging
rewards
and
costs
satissfied + commited relationship:
rewards
outweigh costs and potential alternatives are less attractive than
curren
relationship
Comparison level:
based on person's idea on how much
reward
they deserve to receive in
relationships
subjective
- depends on
previous romantic experiences
+ culture norms
reinforced by
books
/
films
/tv-shows
linked to person's
self-esteem
: someone with high self-esteem would have higher expectations in
rewards
people consider relationships worth pursuing if
CL
is equal to or better than
previous relationship
Comparison level for alternatives:
person's
perception
of whether other potential relationships would be more
rewarding
than current
set: people stick to current relationship as long as they find them more
profitable
than
alternatives
psychologists like
duck
: if people consider themself to be content in current relationship, they may not notice that there are available
alternatives
stages of relationship development:
1 -
sampling
stage: costs and rewards associating with others explored
2 -
bargaining
stage: process of negotiation in which rewards and costs agreed upon
3 -
commitment
stage: exchange of rewards and cost stabilize
4 -
instituitionalisation
stage: norms and expectations firmly established
AO3: weakness of SET
ignores
equity
in relationships
eg: research support for role of equity in relationships + view that this is more important than balance of
rewards
and
costs
therefore: set can't
account
for everyone's views on costs and rewards (subjective)
therefore: set isn't
applicable
to all
AO3: weakness of SET
suggested to be based on
inappropiate
assumptions
eg: found people who rated themselves as being ina
highly
commited relationship, spent less time looking at images of
attractive
people
weakness: based on
faulty
assumptions of what relationships consist of
therefore: set is
limited
, can't account for majority of relationships, making it difficult to
generalise
theories of romantic relationships -
equity
theory
proposed by
hatfield
et al - viewed as extension of SET
suggests people are
content
in their relationships if the benefits are roughly equal to the costs
equity
: when the distribution of rewards and
costs
is fair for both partners in relationships
equity and equality
equity: doing the same thing
equality
: equals the
same
role of equity:
what matters most with equity is that both partners' level of
profit
is roughly the same
when there's a lack of equity, one partner
over-benefits
and one
under-benefits
consequences of inequity:
theory states a
positive
correlation between inequity and satisfaction.
greater
the inequity: greater the
diassatisfaction
could lead to two things:
1 - changes in
perceived
equity
2 -
dealing
with inequity
1 - chnages in
percieved equity
partners can change equity over time
decide to make a change to make it more equitable
can bo both way, may go lower or higher overtime
2 - dealing with
inequity
the more
inequitable
the relationship is, the more harder the
overbenfitter
would have to work to make it more fair
cognitive
change: change their thoughts on what was
previously
a cost, as a norm
AO3
: strength of
equity theory
research suport
eg: survey of 118 recently married couples and measured
equity
of
self-report
scale
found: those who considered their relationship as
equitable
were more satisfied than those who were
under-benefitted
supports that
equity
is more important in maintaining a relationship than
equality
AO3: weakness of equity theory
can't be applied to all cultures
eg: found there are cultural differences in the link between equity and satisfaction
individualistic
culture: considered relationship more satisfying when it was
equitable
collectivist
culture: more satissfied when
over-benefitted
cannot apply to all
cultures
+ not generalisable + lacks
cultural relativism
therefore:
limited
to explaining
individiualistic
cultures
AO3: weakness of equity theory
not all partners are concerned about achieving
equity
eg: suggests some people are
less
sensitive to equity than othrs
known as
'benevolents'
- who are okay with giving mroe
'entitleds
' - overbenefitters
individuals have less concern about equity than suggested in theory
therefore:
varies
from relationship to relationship
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