The Science of Intimate Relationships
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The Science of Intimate Relationships

Garth J. O. Fletcher, Jeffry A. Simpson, Lorne Campbell, Nickola C. Overall

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eBook - ePub

The Science of Intimate Relationships

Garth J. O. Fletcher, Jeffry A. Simpson, Lorne Campbell, Nickola C. Overall

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About This Book

Provides a unique interdisciplinary approach to the science of intimate human relationships

This newly updated edition of a popular text is the first to present a full-blooded interdisciplinary and theoretically coherent approach to the latest scientific findings relating to human sexual relationships. Written by recognized leaders in the field in a style that is rigorous yet accessible, it looks beyond the core knowledge in social and evolutionary psychology to incorporate material and perspectives from cognitive science (including brain-imaging studies), developmental psychology, anthropology, comparative psychology, clinical psychology, genetic research, sociology, and biology.

Written by an international team of acclaimed experts in the field, The Science of Intimate Relationships offers a wealth of thought-provoking ideas and insights into the science behind the initiation, maintenance, and termination of romantic relationships. The 2 nd Edition features two new chapters on health and relationships, and friends and family, both of which shed new light on the complex links among human nature, culture, and romantic love. It covers key topics such as mate selection, attachment theory, love, communication, sex, relationship dissolution, violence, mind-reading, and the relationship brain.

  • Provides a coherent and theoretically integrative approach to the subject of intimate relationships
  • Offers an interdisciplinary perspective that looks beyond social and evolutionary psychology to many other scientific fields of study
  • Includes two new chapters on 'Relationships and Health' and 'Friends and Family', added in response to feedback from professors who have used the textbook with their classes
  • Presented by recognized leaders in the field of relationships
  • Features PowerPoint slides and an online Teaching Handbook

The Science of Intimate Relationships, 2 nd Edition is designed for upper-level undergraduate students of human sexuality, psychology, anthropology, and other related fields.

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Information

Year
2019
ISBN
9781119430094
Edition
2

1
Introduction: The Science of Intimate Relationships

Focus of the book – domains of scientific study – interdisciplinary links – relationship mind and body – common sense and pop psychology – research methods – book overview – summary and conclusions
The emergence of a science of relationships represents a frontier – perhaps the last major frontier – in the study of humankind.
Berscheid and Peplau (1983)
The first known academic treatise on intimate relationships was Plato's Symposium, written approximately 2300 years ago. In this historic document, Aristophanes tells a tale of a curious mythical being that is spherical in form with two complete sets of arms, legs, and genitalia. Because of the strength and speed of these creatures (they cart‐wheeled around on four arms and four legs), they posed a threat to the gods. Accordingly, Zeus split them in half and rearranged their genitals so that they were forced to embrace each other front on to have sexual relations. Some of the original beings had two sets of male genitalia, some had two sets of female genitalia, and some had one set of female and one set of male genitalia. Thus, procreation of the species was possible only by members of the original male–female creatures getting together. Possibly in deference to the sexual orientation of some of his audience (or to the tenor of that time), Aristophanes was quick to add that males who sought union with other males were “bold and manly,” whereas individuals who originated from the hermaphrodite creatures were adulterers or promiscuous women (Sayre 1995, p. 106). Regardless of sexual orientation, the need for love is thus born of the longing to reunite with one's long‐lost other half and to achieve an ancient unity destroyed by the gods.
As this allegory suggests, individuals are alone and incomplete – an isolation that can be banished, or at least ameliorated, when humans pair‐off and experience the intimacy that can only be gained in a close, emotionally connected relationship. Such intimacy, the experience of reuniting with one's long‐lost other half, reaches its peak in parent–infant bonding and in the intimate high of romantic sexual relationships. But such intimacy is also experienced quite powerfully and deeply in platonic relationships, familial relationships, and in the long sunset of sexual relationships that have lost their passionate urgency and settled into a deep form of close companionship.
Just like Plato's mythical beings, then, humans have a basic need to be accepted, appreciated, and cared for, and to reciprocate such attitudes and behaviors – in short, to love and to be loved (Baumeister and Leary 1995). This is especially true for finding a sexual or romantic partner, a quest that can range from a one‐night stand to seeking out a mate for life. Indeed, for most people the goal of forming a permanent, sexual liaison with another person is a pivotal goal in life in which a massive outlay of energy is invested.
In this textbook, we confine our attention largely to intimate relationships that are sexual or romantic rather than other types of relationships, such as parent–child relationships, platonic friendships, casual friendships, or co‐worker relationships. Obviously, intimate relationships can be, and often are, influenced by these other types of relationships. When these connections are important or salient, we will address them. Moreover, we discuss certain categories of nonsexual relationships that are centrally related to adult intimate relationships, the most important being parent–child relationships. And we discuss both heterosexual and same‐sex relationships, including their similarities and differences. Nevertheless, our attention is focused on heterosexual relationships, simply because most scientific research has investigated heterosexual relationships.
This introductory chapter sets the scene for the book by tracing the history of scientific work on relationships, dissecting what is true (and false) about common sense and pop psychology, briefly discussing basic research methods in the field, and finally presenting a brief overview of the book's content. We have boldfaced all technical terms the first time they appear in each chapter of the book, and provide brief definitions of each term in the glossary at the end of the book.

The Science of Intimate Relationships: A Brief History and Analysis

As Plato's Symposium attests, humans have been theorizing about relationships for eons. This is not surprising, given the proclivity of humans to develop causal models and explanations, many of which are based on culturally shared understandings. Indeed, this is one hallmark of our species. Consistently, many of the topics covered in this book have been discussed in literature and plays hundreds of years before any rigorous scientific investigation of relationships appeared (think Homer, Shakespeare, and Jane Austen).
The first scientific forays into intimate relationships did not take place until the twentieth century. To give you some idea of the way in which scientific work has taken on Tsunami proportions in relatively recent years, we used a popular scholarly database – Google Scholar – to assess the number of publications in scientific journals devoted to the topic of romantic relationships during the 28 years from 1988 to 2015. As shown in Figure 1.1, the number of publications has rapidly increased over this period of time, from 90 in 1988–1991 to 4750 in 2012–2015. Moreover, typifying a remarkable acceleration in publications, 74% of these publications have been produced between 2008 and 2015.
Bar chart depicts the sexual or romantic relationships that describe the increase in the number of publications over the period of time, from the year nineteen eighty eight to two thousand and fifteen.
Figure 1.1 Publications from 1988 to 2015 – sexual or romantic relationships.

Domains of Study

Publications relevant to romantic relationships have appeared across a diverse set of disciplines, including cross‐cultural and anthropological studies, neuroscience, clinical and family psychology, developmental psychology, the science of sexual behavior, evolutionary psychology, and social and personality psychology. Figure 1.2 gives our take on the pioneering contributions in each field. Notably, all of the pioneering contributions were published in the second half of the twentieth century, with two stunning exceptions – two publications in the second half of the nineteenth century by Charles Darwin (more on Darwin later).
Schematic illustration of major scientific domains that studies the sexual relationships from distal to proximal levels, along with seminal publications.
Figure 1.2 Major scientific domains studying sexual relationships from distal to proximal levels, along with seminal publications.
Scientific approaches to the study of intimate relationships differ according to their goals and level of focus (see Figure 1.2). At the most general level, all human sciences have the same core aims – the explanation, prediction, and control of human behavior – although certain aims are sometimes emphasized depending on the particular approach. For example, clinical psychology emphasizes the prediction and control of relationship phenomena (especially relationship functioning, success, and stability), whereas social psychology and evolutionary psychology focus more on explanation.
Different approaches to the study of human relationships concentrate on different goals or questions, and, thus differ in their specific domain(s) of investigation. The study of social development, for example, is interested in understanding the development of bonding and attachment in childhood and how it relates to the development of intimate relationships across the life span (termed an ontogenetic approach). Evolutionary psychology is primarily concerned with understanding the evolutionary origins of human courting, sexual behavior, mate selection, parenting, and so forth. Thus, evolutionary psychology is primarily concerned with distal causes stemming from our remote evolutionary past in order to clarify current human behavioral, cognitive, and emotional tendencies. Social psychology, in contrast, takes human dispositions (behavioral, cognitive, and emotional) as givens, and seeks to model the way in which our dispositions combine with external contingencies in our local environment to produce important behavior, social judgments, and emotions. Thus, social psychology offers much more fine‐grained predictions and explanations of particular behaviors and cognitions that occur in specific situations (a proximal level) than does evolutionary psychology. Anthropological and cross‐cultural approaches, on the other hand, focus on the way in which broad cultural and institutional contexts frame and guide the behavior of individuals and couples. Whereas social psychology tends to focus on the links between the individual and the dyadic relationship (e.g. how one person's traits influence his or her partner and relationship outcomes), anthropological approaches tend to focus on connections between the couple (e.g. the rules and norms in relationship) and the wider culture in which the relationship is embedded.

An Example

A social psychological approach to understanding how people select mates might be to postulate a psychological model examining the importance that each partner places on particular characteristics (which will vary across individuals) and how they are treated as cognitively stored standards, such as the perceived importance of finding an attractive and healthy mate. Individuals then use these ideal standards to make choices between different potential mates or to evaluate how satisfied they are with their current mate. Resultant levels of satisfaction and relationship commitment, in turn, affect their own behavior, which influence their partner's behavior, resulting in the couple deciding to live together or break‐off the relationship. Thus, a social psychological model describes how cognitions, emotions, and behaviors interact (combine) within each person, and also how individuals in relationships communicate and influence each other (see Chapter 3). These models can be quite detailed, describing, as they do, a complex reality. Nevertheless, they deal only with a certain slice of what influences individuals and relationships at a given point in time, much of which operates at the proximal level (see earlier) rather than at the distal level emanating either from the remote evolutionary past or wider cultural forces.
Evolutionary psychology, on the other hand, asks important questions that social psychologists usually do not ask, such as why do people want mates who are attractive and healthy in the first place, or what are the origins of certain gender differences? (To avoid confusion, throughout the book we will use “gender” to refer to males versus females, and “sex” to refer to sexual intercourse or related behaviors and attitudes.) Answers for evolutionary psychologists often lie in the evolutionary history of humans, particularly in the adaptive advantages that should have accrued to our ancestors in ancestral environments if they were attracted to and chose certain kinds of mates, such as those who were relatively attractive and healthy.

Interdisciplinary Links

Scientists are increasingly working in an interdisciplinary fashion across all the domains shown in Figure 1.2. For example, social psychologists are beginning to team‐up with evolutionary psychologists, developmental psychologists, and neuroscientists. Indeed, the whole field is becoming inter‐disciplinary. Covering all these aspects in a single book is a tall order, and this cannot be accomplished in just one theory. Nevertheless, we address this broad and diverse body of work in this book (which makes it unique among relationship texts). Our ecumenical strategy is based on our conviction that the most appropriate way to deal with the wide range of scientific approaches to relationships is in terms of a theory‐knitting approach that focuses on differ...

Table of contents