AI Article Synopsis

  • Close relationships play a vital role in shaping emotional experiences and regulation between partners, influenced by individual self-regulatory abilities and social skills.
  • This study investigated how respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), a marker of self-regulation, affects the relationship between rumination (a negative emotional strategy) and conflict in couples, specifically focusing on 83 cohabiting partners with young children over 12 months.
  • Results showed that rumination from both partners contributed to ongoing conflicts, but higher RSA in one partner helped reduce the negative impact of their partner's rumination on couples' conflict, emphasizing the interconnected nature of emotion regulation in relationships.

Article Abstract

Close relationships are an important social context in which emotional experiences, regulation, and coregulation unfold. This interpersonal emotion regulation process is likely intertwined with the self-regulatory capacities and social skills of each individual dyad member. This study aimed to examine whether respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), a physiological marker related to self-regulation, moderates the impact of rumination, a maladaptive emotion regulation strategy, on couples' conflict. A dyadic, longitudinal design examined the association among RSA, rumination, and couples' conflict in a sample of 83 cohabiting romantic partners raising young children. At baseline, rumination and RSA from each romantic partner were assessed. Couples' conflict was reported at 3 time points over the following 12 months. Actor-partner interdependence modeling examined the mutual contributions of each couple member's rumination to couples' conflict, as well as the moderating impact of RSA. Results indicated that rumination from both members of the dyad were independently associated with couples' conflict across the 12-month period. Furthermore, RSA moderated the association between one's partner's rumination and couples' conflict, such that high actor RSA attenuated the positive association between partner's rumination and couples' conflict. The findings highlight the interdependent nature of emotion regulation within close relationships, and the impact of RSA on interpersonal emotion regulation processes. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/fam0000544DOI Listing

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