Trajectories of relationship and individual functioning among waitlisted couples for an online relationship intervention

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allen W. Barton ◽  
Justin A. Lavner ◽  
Matthew J. Hawrilenko ◽  
Brian D. Doss
2016 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 721-741 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tiffany M. Jones ◽  
Karl G. Hill ◽  
Marina Epstein ◽  
Jungeun Olivia Lee ◽  
J. David Hawkins ◽  
...  

AbstractThis study examines the interplay between individual and social–developmental factors in the development of positive functioning, substance use problems, and mental health problems. This interplay is nested within positive and negative developmental cascades that span childhood, adolescence, the transition to adulthood, and adulthood. Data are drawn from the Seattle Social Development Project, a gender-balanced, ethnically diverse community sample of 808 participants interviewed 12 times from ages 10 to 33. Path modeling showed short- and long-term cascading effects of positive social environments, family history of depression, and substance-using social environments throughout development. Positive family social environments set a template for future partner social environment interaction and had positive influences on proximal individual functioning, both in the next developmental period and long term. Family history of depression adversely affected mental health functioning throughout adulthood. Family substance use began a cascade of substance-specific social environments across development, which was the pathway through which increasing severity of substance use problems flowed. The model also indicated that adolescent, but not adult, individual functioning influenced selection into positive social environments, and significant cross-domain effects were found in which substance-using social environments affected subsequent mental health.


Disasters ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 261-288 ◽  
Author(s):  
Renee Zahnow ◽  
Rebecca Wickes ◽  
Mel Taylor ◽  
Jonathan Corcoran

1981 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 52-69
Author(s):  
Frank K. McKinney

The individual functioning units (zooids) in stenolaemate bryozoan colonies include skeletal portions called zooecia (singular, zooecium). Within a zooecium there may be basal diaphragms that make the occupied portion (living chamber) shorter than the full length of the zooecium, and there may be various skeletal parts that project into and modify the shape of the living chamber. The entire zooecium constitutes a record of zooidal ontogeny and of the geometrical relationships between neighboring zooecia or between zooecia and the surrounding colonial tissues. Therefore, evolutionary changes in zooecial shape reflect changes in all stages of zooidal ontogeny and in relationships between zooids and their surrounding intracolonial environment. In addition, evolutionary changes in zooidal size have affected zooecial shape in some stenolaemate groups.


1990 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Magnusson

This article is about the lessons that can be learned from the mistakes of the past. After a critical, constructive analysis of current theorizing and research, important directions of future personality psychology are described against the background of a general theoretical framework. It is argued that individual functioning cannot be understood or explained if the environmental factors that are operating in the individual's interactions with the environment and the biological factors that are constantly interacting with the cognitive‐emotional system are not considered. Finally, the article focuses on conceptual and methodological issues that are of major importance for further progress in personality psychology, viz. (a) the match between level of psychological processes and type of data, (b) the nature of psychological phenomena studied in terms of variables, (c) the use of chronological age as the marker of individual development, and (d) the comparison between a variable and a person approach.


2018 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 662-678 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian R. W. Baucom ◽  
Katherine J. W. Baucom ◽  
Jasara N. Hogan ◽  
Alexander O. Crenshaw ◽  
Stacia V. Bourne ◽  
...  

1985 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 115-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Magnusson

This paper consists of three main parts. First, a brief review of an interactional perspective for research on individual functioning is given. The need for integrated models, taking into consideration both psychological and biological factors on the person side in studying the person-environment interaction is emphasized. Second, empirical studies from a longitudinal program are presented. These studies are used as a basis for a discussion of methodological problems connected with interindividual differences in biological maturation. Thirdly, major implications for further development research in an interactional perspective are suggested, including (a) a need for well planned longitudinal research, (b) careful systematic observation and description of psychological phenomena, (c) integration of psychological and biological variables, (d) more interest devoted to the person as an integrated totality than to variables per se, (e) more interest devoted to lawfulness of processes in human functioning than to prediction of behavior, and (f) systematic analyses of environments and situations. Finally, it is argued that an interactional perspective can serve as a general frame of reference for planning, carrying through and interpreting empirical research, in order to overcome the fragmentation that now impedes real progress.


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