Social Exchange in Developing Relationships, Volume 10Robert Lee Burgess, Ted L. Huston |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 42
Page xx
... experimental control . How much has field research on animal behavior told us that we should never have been in a position to discover by experiment ! And why should recent field research on lions and ba- boons have to remind us of the ...
... experimental control . How much has field research on animal behavior told us that we should never have been in a position to discover by experiment ! And why should recent field research on lions and ba- boons have to remind us of the ...
Page 33
... experiment , in which he is placed before a video screen or at a table , so in the traditional perception experiment the person- perceiver was physically restrained , his head clasped in a rigid position by various mechanical devices ...
... experiment , in which he is placed before a video screen or at a table , so in the traditional perception experiment the person- perceiver was physically restrained , his head clasped in a rigid position by various mechanical devices ...
Page 55
... experiment we shall shortly describe , that this type of visual interaction probably represents a relatively small ... experiment we conducted , in which both attention and attraction were used as depen- dent measures . This experiment ...
... experiment we shall shortly describe , that this type of visual interaction probably represents a relatively small ... experiment we conducted , in which both attention and attraction were used as depen- dent measures . This experiment ...
Contents
The Development Course | 6 |
Social Exchange in Developing Relationships | 10 |
The Initiation of Social Relationships | 25 |
Copyright | |
81 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Academic Press analysis association Baltes become Berscheid Boissevain chapter close relationships cognitive commitment concept concerned conflict context couples courtship dependent developmental developmental psychology dimensions dyadic dynamic effects engage equity theory example exchange theory expected experience factors feel heterosexual Homans human Huston important increase indicators individual infant influence interdependence interest interpersonal attraction interpersonal relationships intimacy intimate relationships involvement Journal of Personality Kelley Levinger marital marriage married couples moral mutual nepotism norms one's orthogenetic outcomes parents participants partners perceived Personality and Social physical attractiveness predict premarital problems reciprocity rela relation relationship development relationship initiation relationship reasoning relatively rewards role romantic love Scanzoni sex guilt sexual behavior ship situation Snoek social behavior social environment social exchange social exchange theory social interaction social network Social Psychology social relationships stage structure suggest theorists Thibaut tion tionship variables Walster women York