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Madathil, Jayamala; Benshoff, James M. – Family Journal: Counseling and Therapy for Couples and Families, 2008
To date, little research has been published related to cross-cultural differences in such marital factors as love, intimacy, happiness, and satisfaction. The present study compares factors contributing to marital satisfaction and examines correlations between the importance of these factors and the level of satisfaction for three groups: Asian…
Descriptors: Indians, Marital Satisfaction, Intimacy, Cultural Differences
Bailis, Karen L. – 1984
Chronic pain is a syndrome which forces many changes upon the patient and upon the family system. To examine the relationship between patients' and their spouses' psychosocial functioning, questionnaire data were collected from 28 male and 18 female patients referred for evaluation to an outpatient pain management program. The Minnesota…
Descriptors: Depression (Psychology), Interpersonal Communication, Marital Satisfaction, Patients
Fincham, Frank D.; Beach, Stephen R. – 1986
Cognitive factors have been shown to play an important role in marital distress. To examine the importance of the self-other distinction for understanding the impact of attributions on marital satisfaction, two studies were conducted. In the first study, causal attributions for naturally occurring behavior by the self and spouse were investigated…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Marital Instability, Marital Satisfaction, Marriage Counseling
Ekerdt, David J.; And Others – 1986
The marital relationship is a basic context of retirement, where spouses' separate perceptions of retirement, and of each other's views, are an essential part of the retirement experience. To explore this issue, 297 married men who had been retired for 6 years or less, all participants in the Veterans Administration Normative Aging Study, reported…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Congruence (Psychology), Life Satisfaction, Marital Satisfaction
O'Connor, Mary Ann; Bodine, George E. – 1985
Alcohol abuse results in a variety of problems including employment difficulties and family problems. This study integrates a family systems model of alcoholism with a family crisis model for recovery to study spouses of alcoholics and their perceptions of family stress, coping styles, and quality of marriage. Participants (N=60) were husbands or…
Descriptors: Alcoholism, Coping, Drinking, Family Problems
O'Farrell, Timothy J.; Birchler, Gary R. – 1985
Understanding characteristics specific to alcoholics' marriages could help therapists to more effectively address the needs of alcoholic clients. To identify some of these characteristics, 26 married couples with an alcoholic husband (ALC) were compared with 26 maritally-conficted (MC) and 26 nonconflicted (NC) couples without alcohol problems.…
Descriptors: Adults, Alcoholism, Interpersonal Communication, Interpersonal Relationship
Ball, F. L. Jessica – 1983
Traditionally, research findings on family problem solving have been based on observational data from vignettes provided by the researcher. To examine problem solving in couple relationships from a participatory perspective, 27 married couples discussed a mutually relevant domestic problem, while being videotaped. Subsequently, each partner…
Descriptors: Family Problems, Interpersonal Communication, Marital Satisfaction, Problem Solving

Barbarin, Oscar A.; And Others – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1985
Interviewed 32 married couples about their experiences and strategies for coping with their children's cancer. Most informants reported that family cohesion was strengthened by their experiences and that spouses were the most important source of support. (BH)
Descriptors: Cancer, Children, Coping, Hospitalized Children
Speismen, Joseph C.; And Others – 1984
While there is reasonable agreement about some of the broad parameters of men's and women's marriages, less has been written about their perspectives on marriage, or about the individual characteristics associated with marital satisfaction. Data on marital adjustment, demographics, sex role identity, and sexuality were taken from 50 participants…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Marital Satisfaction, Occupations, Perception
Krokoff, Lowell Jay – 1984
Most of the observational study of marriage has focused on relatively young and highly educated couples from professional backgrounds; working-class couples, older couples, and couples from distressed marriages seem reluctant to volunteer for research on close relationships. The development of techniques for recruiting these couples represents an…
Descriptors: Attrition (Research Studies), Marital Satisfaction, Marriage, Recruitment
Speisman, Joseph C.; And Others – 1985
There has been little research linking similarity between spouses on any aspect of maturity and marital adjustment. As part of a large-scale, longitudinal project on family relations, five dimensions of intimacy (relationship orientation, caring/concern, sexuality, commitment, communication) and three broad levels of intimacy maturity were…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Congruence (Psychology), Interpersonal Communication, Marital Satisfaction
Weishaus, Sylvia; Field, Dorothy – 1984
Current research focusing on long-term marriages have assessed marriages at one time period only. To sort out age and stage differences from cohort effects, a longitudinal case study analysis was undertaken with the 17 surviving couples of the Berkeley Older Generation Study, a group that has been interviewed in young adulthood (1929-30), in…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Aging (Individuals), Family Characteristics, Interpersonal Relationship

Belsky, Jay; Isabella, Russell A. – Child Development, 1985
Indicates that husband-wife differences in evaluations of marital adjustment increased over time when individuals recalled being reared in a cold/rejecting as opposed to warm/supportive manner, particularly when individuals also recalled their own parents as not having an especially harmonious marital relationship. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Birth, Child Rearing, Emotional Experience, Marital Satisfaction

Jacob, Theodore; Seilhamer, Ruth Ann – American Journal of Family Therapy, 1985
Need for behaviorally based report procedures capable of describing important aspects of family functioning is expressed. Adaptation of the Areas of Change Questionniare is presented for assessment of parent-adolescent relationships. The potential utility of this instrument in clinical and research efforts is described, and initial psychometric…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Behavior, Family Problems, Family Relationship
Krokoff, Lowell Jay – 1984
Most of the observational study of marriage has focused on relatively young and highly educated couples from professional backgrounds. Very little is known about the generality of this observational research to couples whose marital philosophies have been influenced by a different array of socioeconomic conditions and secular trends. Satisfied and…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Marital Satisfaction, Marriage, Negative Attitudes