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Journal Article

Citation

Rogge RD, Bradbury TN. J. Consult. Clin. Psychol. 1999; 67(3): 340-351.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology UCLA 90095-1563, USA. ronrogge@ucla.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 1999, American Psychological Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10369054

Abstract

Measures of communication and aggression, taken from 56 newlywed couples, were used to predict marital outcomes 4 years later. Aggression discriminated between separated or divorced couples and those who remained married. In contrast, communication discriminated between couples who were maritally satisfied after 4 years and those who were married but dissatisfied. Thus, over the 1st 4 years of marriage, marital satisfaction and dissolution appear to be predicted by separate factors. These results remained unchanged after controlling for initial marital satisfaction. Additional analyses showed that 68% of the marriages could be accurately classified into their outcome groups using communication and aggression variables. These results help to integrate prior marital research on communication and aggression, and they suggest that it may be necessary to focus on both factors in efforts to strengthen marriages and prevent divorce.


Language: en

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