1995
DOI: 10.1080/08934219509367613
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Romantic jealousy and relational satisfaction: A look at the impact of jealousy experience and expression

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Cited by 95 publications
(62 citation statements)
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“…H 2 revealed significant positive associations among alternative quality and both jealousy experience variables. Results for the RQ were consistent with prior research (e.g., Andersen et al, 1995) rather than the investment model, as relational satisfaction was negatively related to both emotional and cognitive jealousy. H 3 revealed a significant, negative relationship between cognitive jealousy and commitment and a nonsignificant relationship between emotional jealousy and commitment.…”
Section: Jealousy Experiencesupporting
confidence: 80%
“…H 2 revealed significant positive associations among alternative quality and both jealousy experience variables. Results for the RQ were consistent with prior research (e.g., Andersen et al, 1995) rather than the investment model, as relational satisfaction was negatively related to both emotional and cognitive jealousy. H 3 revealed a significant, negative relationship between cognitive jealousy and commitment and a nonsignificant relationship between emotional jealousy and commitment.…”
Section: Jealousy Experiencesupporting
confidence: 80%
“…This result, as well as those of earlier studies, reported that jealousy is a frequent source of dissatisfaction in intimate partner relationships or relational abuse. Although some earlier studies identified jealousy as a significant risk factor for hostile, aggressive and violent behaviour toward a partner (70,(72)(73)(74), the results of our study did not confirm the predictive value of jealousy for physical forms of violence. However, it was found that jealousy significantly contributed to psychological forms of violence.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 57%
“…Guerrero and Eloy (1992) found all three types of jealousy to be inversely related to marital satisfaction, with cognitive jealousy showing the strongest negative association with marital satisfaction, followed by behavioural and emotional jealousy. In distinguishing between cognitive and emotional jealousy, Andersen et al (1995) found that cognitive jealousy had a stronger negative relation with relational satisfaction than emotional jealousy. With regard to relationship intimacy, Knobloch et al (2001) uncovered a curvilinear relationship between emotional jealousy and intimacy, such that emotional jealousy peaked at moderate levels of intimacy.…”
Section: Resolving Mixed Findingsmentioning
confidence: 97%