Close Relationships
As defined in your text, interdependence theory refers to "the idea that satisfaction, investment, and perceived alternatives are critical in determining commitment to a particular relationship."
Satisfaction, the first factor that determines relationship commitment, is related to the costs and benefits associated with a relationship. Any relationship carries certain costs and benefits. These can be in any domain, including financial, emotional, sexual, and social. Just like how people tend to be satisfied with business arrangements if the benefits of these arrangements outweigh the costs, people tend to be satisfied with their relationships when the benefits of these relationships outweigh the costs.
Investment, refers to how much people put into a relationship. Getting to know your partner's friends, getting a mortgage, and giving up on activities to be with your partner are all examples of investment. The higher the investment, the less likely the relationship will end.
Comparison level for alternatives, is defined in your text as "the perceived quality of alternatives to the current relationship." People will be less committed to a relationship if there are better alternatives available, and the relationship will be more likely to end.
This task is designed to illustrate how these factors influence people's commitment to their relationships.
Instructions
To begin, we will ask you a series of questions about two of your relationships: a successful relationship that you enjoy and have not ended, and another relationship that you have personally ended.
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Results
Debriefing
The purpose of this task is to demonstrate that commitment to a relationship depends on a number of factors: satisfaction (costs & benefits), investment, and alternatives. You were asked a series of questions about two of your relationships: a successful relationship and one that you have ended. The results of actual studies find that people tend to be committed to relationships and do not end them if their satisfaction is high (i.e., rewards are high and costs are low), investment is high, and alternatives are low.
However, relationship commitment can change over time. Caryl Rusbult (1983) asked male and female students who were in a romantic relationship to answer a series of questions, which were similar to the ones you were asked, at various points over an academic year. This type of longitudinal study is powerful because it shows, in this case, how these factors influence relationship commitment over time. Her results reveal that successful relationships (i.e., those that did not end), compared to relationships that ended, became relatively more positive with time.
That is, compared to relationships that ended, successful relationships showed:
References:
Rusbult, C. E. (1983). A longitudinal test of the investment model: The development (and deterioration) of satisfaction and commitment in heterosexual involvements. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 45, 101-117.
Quiz
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