Past research on extradyadic relationship experiences (including infidelity) often suffers from restricted sampling and retrospective accounts, which may have given researchers a distorted image of what it is like for people to have affairs. In this research, we shed light on the experiences people have during their affairs with a sample of registered users on Ashley Madison, a website geared toward facilitating infidelity. Our participants completed questionnaires about their primary (e.g., spousal) relationships, as well as personality traits, motivations to seek affairs, and outcomes. Findings from this study challenge widely held notions about infidelity experiences. Analyses revealed that participants were highly satisfied with their affairs and expressed little moral regret. A small subset of participants reported having consensually open relationships with their partners, who knew about their activity on Ashley Madison. In contrast to previous findings, we did not observe low relationship quality (i.e., satisfaction, love, commitment) to be a major driver of affairs and the affairs did not predict decreases in these relationship quality variables over time. That is, among a sample of individuals who proactively sought affairs, their affairs were not primarily motivated by poor dyadic/marital relationships, their affairs did not seem to have a strong negative impact on their relationships, and personal ethics did not play a strong role in people's feelings about their affairs.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10508-023-02573-y | DOI Listing |
J Allied Health
November 2021
Dep. of Physician Assistant Studies, School of Health Professions, UT Health San Antonio, 7703 Floyd Curl Drive MC 6249, San Antonio, TX 78229, USA. Tel 210-567-4244, fax 210-567-4241.
This pilot study, through the application of phenomenological methodology, considered the physician assistant (PA) profession as a "lived experience" in an attempt to understand how these medical practitioners end up on the PA path and what keeps them there. Additionally, the researchers focused on understanding why specific individuals gravitate towards the PA education option. Major themes that developed during the interviews with eight PAs included personal unfamiliarity with the PA profession during the first two decades of life, the decision to pursue PA training while in undergraduate studies, assuming roles often considered MD/DO specific and the subsequent patient confusion with the difference between a PA and an MD/DO, and significant work satisfaction resulting in the lack of desire to change profession.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFeNeuro
October 2017
Department of Psychiatry, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA 52242; Department of Neurology, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA 52242; Department of Free Radical and Radiation Biology, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA 52242; Department of Veteran Affairs, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA 52242; Weill Cornell Autism Research Program, Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University, New York, NY 10065.
Axonal degeneration is a prominent feature of many forms of neurodegeneration, and also an early event in blast-mediated traumatic brain injury (TBI), the signature injury of soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. It is not known, however, whether this axonal degeneration is what drives development of subsequent neurologic deficits after the injury. The Wallerian degeneration slow strain () of mice is resistant to some forms of axonal degeneration because of a triplicated fusion gene encoding the first 70 amino acids of Ufd2a, a ubiquitin-chain assembly factor, that is linked to the complete coding sequence of nicotinamide mononucleotide adenylyltransferase 1 (NMAT1).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiovasc Revasc Med
December 2016
Midwest Cardiovascular Research Foundation, Davenport, IA, USA.
Background: Treatment of chronic total occlusion (CTO) is complex and has a low adoption rate by interventional cardiologists. The introduction of the hybrid approach has provided a systematic step-by-step approach to treat complex CTO lesions with a high success rate. We describe the overall experience with the use of the hybrid approach of a non-CTO operator and analyze differences in the procedural and long term outcomes before and after the initial 30 cases performed.
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