1 |
Physical Affection in the Parent-Child RelationshipChandley, Rachel Burgard 05 July 2016 (has links)
No description available.
|
2 |
The Effect of Marital Therapy on Physical AffectionMigdat, Tiffany Ann 01 July 2016 (has links)
Research indicates that marital satisfaction is associated with levels of physical affection between partners. This is important because there is evidence of physical and mental health benefits of physical affection. Although past research has shown that marital therapy increases levels of marital and sexual satisfaction, the association between marital therapy and physical affection has not been explored. This study used a treatment group and a control group of 108 married couples to assess the relationship between marital therapy and physical affection over a course of 12 weeks. Using structural equation modeling and an actor partner analytic model, results indicated that marital therapy was significantly associated with increases in physical affection for husbands, but not wives.
|
3 |
Reciprocal Communication as a Form of Nonverbal Communication: A Qualitative ApproachPenrod, John Christian 08 March 2011 (has links) (PDF)
The current state of psychological research in nonverbal communication is briefly summarized and several problems are noted. Reciprocal communication (RC) is suggested, defined, and qualitatively investigated as a way of describing the experience of emotional compatibility in communication, with an emphasis on form, degree, and timing as fundamental aspects of nonverbal communication. Support for three different levels of emotional compatibility (fully, partially, and nonreciprocal) is found. Variation in the interpretation of nonverbal communication when communication is perceived as either intentional or unintentional is noted, and a system of categorizing reciprocal communication is suggested. Further patterns in nonverbal communication are observed, and terminology suggested.
|
Page generated in 0.0893 seconds