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Articles

Can security-enhancing interventions overcome psychological barriers to responsiveness in couple relationships?

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Pages 246-260 | Received 01 Dec 2010, Accepted 15 Sep 2011, Published online: 08 Apr 2013
 

Abstract

Recent studies have shown that both dispositional and experimentally enhanced attachment security facilitate compassion and altruism. Here we report findings from a laboratory experiment, replicated in two countries (Israel and the United States), testing the hypotheses that (a) increased security (accomplished through subliminal priming) fosters caregiving behavior toward a romantic partner who discloses a personal problem, and (b) this increased security overcomes barriers to responsiveness induced by mental depletion. We gathered data on participants’ attachment insecurities, randomly assigned them to one of four mental depletion (yes, no) and priming (security, neutral) conditions, and coded their behavior in an interaction with their romantic partner who was disclosing a personal problem. Dispositional attachment insecurities and manipulated mental depletion adversely affected caregiving, but security priming overrode the detrimental effects of both mental depletion and attachment insecurity in both Israel and the United States.

Acknowledgements

Preparation of this article was facilitated by a grant from the Fetzer Institute.

Notes

1.Statistical analyses including caregiver’s gender or relationship duration as additional factors revealed no significant effects of these factors on caregivers’ behaviors. Moreover, the reported findings remained unchanged when these factors were included in the analyses.

2.Hierarchical regression analyses performed on the severity of the disclosed problem or care-seeker’s depth of disclosure as a function of priming, mental depletion, and caregiver’s attachment orientation revealed no significant main or interactive effects.

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