When Your Partner is Being Flirted With: The Impact of Unsolicited Attention on Perceived Partner Desirability and Mate Retention Efforts.

IF 2.7 2区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL Journal of Sex Research Pub Date : 2024-08-22 DOI:10.1080/00224499.2024.2391105
Gurit E Birnbaum, Doron Friedman, Kobi Zholtack, Naama Gilad, Noa Bergman, Dan Pollak, Harry T Reis
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Abstract

When searching for a partner, people often rely on social cues to determine partners' suitability, finding those who attract attention from others particularly appealing. While people continue to evaluate their partners beyond relationship initiation, existing research has predominantly concentrated on the effects of observing others' choices during the stage of partner selection, neglecting to consider whether viewing others' attention toward current partners yields similar effects or instead elicits defensive devaluation. In three experiments, we exposed Israeli participants to situations where their partners received unsolicited flirtatious advances, utilizing visualization, virtual reality, and recall techniques. Participants then rated their desire for their partner and mate retention efforts. Results indicated that attention to partners led to decreased desire for them, subsequently predicting reduced relationship investment. These findings suggest that witnessing current partners receiving attention holds a different meaning than observing potential partners in a similar situation, making salient the risk of losing the partner.

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当你的伴侣被人调戏时:主动关注对感知伴侣可取性和伴侣挽留努力的影响。
在寻找伴侣时,人们往往依靠社交线索来判断伴侣是否合适,认为那些吸引他人关注的伴侣特别有吸引力。虽然人们在开始恋爱关系后仍会继续评估自己的伴侣,但现有的研究主要集中于观察他人在选择伴侣阶段的选择所产生的影响,而忽略了观察他人对当前伴侣的关注是否会产生类似的影响,或者反而会引起防御性贬低。在三项实验中,我们利用可视化、虚拟现实和回忆等技术,让以色列参与者置身于其伴侣主动挑逗的情境中。然后,参与者对自己对伴侣的渴望和挽留伴侣的努力进行评分。结果表明,对伴侣的关注会导致对伴侣的欲望下降,进而预测关系投资的减少。这些研究结果表明,目睹当前伴侣受到关注与在类似情况下观察潜在伴侣具有不同的意义,使失去伴侣的风险变得更加突出。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
11.10%
发文量
121
期刊介绍: The Journal of Sex Research (JSR) is a scholarly journal devoted to the publication of articles relevant to the variety of disciplines involved in the scientific study of sexuality. JSR is designed to stimulate research and promote an interdisciplinary understanding of the diverse topics in contemporary sexual science. JSR publishes empirical reports, theoretical essays, literature reviews, methodological articles, historical articles, teaching papers, book reviews, and letters to the editor. JSR actively seeks submissions from researchers outside of North America.
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