Newswise, May 18, 2017-- Even the
most blissful of couples in long-running, exclusive relationships may be fairly
clueless when it comes to spotting the ploys their partner uses to avoid
dealing with emotional issues, suggests new research from psychologists at
Washington University in St. Louis.
“Happier couples see their partners
in a more positive light than do less happy couples,” said Lameese Eldesouky,
lead author of the study and a doctoral student in Psychological and Brain
Sciences at Washington University.
“They tend to underestimate how
often a partner is suppressing emotions and to overestimate a partner’s ability
to see the bright side of an issue that might otherwise spark negative
emotions.”
Titled “Love is Blind, but Not
Completely: Emotion Regulation Trait Judgments in Romantic Relationships,”
Eldesouky’s presentation of the study was offered Jan. 20 at the 2017 meeting
of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology.
Published in the Journal of Personality, the
study examines how accurate and biased dating couples are in judging
personality characteristics that reflect ways of managing one’s emotions.
It focuses on two coping mechanisms
that can be difficult to spot due to the lack of related visual cues:
expressive suppression (stoically hiding one’s emotions behind a calm and quiet
poker face) and cognitive reappraisal (changing one’s perspective to see the
silver lining behind a bad situation).
Other findings include:
- Couples generally are able to judge their
partners’ emotion regulation patterns with some degree of accuracy, but
are somewhat less accurate in judging reappraisal than suppression.
- Women see their partners in a more positive
light than do men, overestimating their partners’ ability to look on the
bright side.
- If someone is generally more emotional, their
romantic partner thinks they are less likely to hide emotions.
- If someone frequently expresses positive
emotions, such as happiness, their romantic partner thinks they use
reappraisal more than they actually do.
Co-authored by Tammy English,
assistant professor of psychology at Washington University, and James Gross,
professor of psychology at Stanford University, the study is based on completed
questionnaires and interviews with 120 heterosexual couples attending colleges
in Northern California.
Participants, ranging in age from 18
to 25 years, were recruited as part of a larger study on emotion in close
relationships. Each couple had been dating on an exclusive basis for more than
six months, with some together as long as four years.
In a previous study, English and
Gross found that men are more likely than women to use suppression with their
partners, and that the ongoing use of emotional suppression can be damaging to
the long-term quality of a relationship.
“Suppression is often considered a
negative trait while reappraisal is considered a positive trait because of the
differential impact these strategies have on emotional well-being and social
relationships,” English said.
“How well you are able to judge
someone else’s personality depends on your personal skills, your relationship
with the person you are judging and the particular trait you are trying to
judge,” English added.
“This study suggests that
suppression might be easier to judge than reappraisal because suppression
provides more external cues, such as appearing stoic.”
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