Emotions play a powerful role in close relationships. Significant progress has been made in understanding the temporal features of emotions associated with the development and maintenance of close relationships across the lifespan. This advancement has revealed further questions: which theories help conceptualize interpersonal emotion dynamics? What are the ways researchers can assess and model these dynamics? How do interpersonal emotion dynamics manifest in different close relationships? And do these emotion dynamics contribute to the maintenance or dissolution of relationships? Interpersonal Emotion Dynamics in Close Relationships addresses these and other questions by bringing together state-of-the-art perspectives from scholars widely recognized for their contributions to the study of emotions in relationships. Each chapter defines interpersonal emotion dynamics, reviews methodological or empirical work, and offers important directions for future research. This volume will be a valuable resource for students, researchers, and practitioners interested in understanding the role of emotions in relationships. Advance praise: ‘Timely, important and well-conceived, this volume addresses a critical topic and does so with great dexterity and depth. The contributors are a stellar group, and the book's chapters are likely to become the go-to source for researchers and those interested in understanding the complex dynamics of emotion in close relationships.' Marc Schulz, Rachel C. Hale Professor in Science and Mathematics, Director of the Clinical Developmental Psychology Program, Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania Table of Contents Introduction Ashley K. Randall and Dominik Schoebi 1. Conceptual approaches to studying interpersonal emotion dynamics Ashley K. Randall and Dominik Schoebi 2. A general framework for capturing interpersonal emotion dynamics: associations with psychological and relational adjustment Laura Sels, Eva Ceulemans and Peter Kuppens 3. Simplifying the complexity of interpersonal emotion dynamics with regression graphics Jonathan E. Butner, Alexander O. Crenshaw, Ascher K. Munion, Alexander Wong and Brian R. W. Baucom 4. Methodological approaches to studying interpersonal emotion dynamics Jessica P. Lougheed and Tom Hollenstein 5. Biological contributions to interpersonal emotion dynamics Baldwin M. Way and Alexis Keaveney 6. Physiological correlates associated with interpersonal emotion dynamics Darby Saxbe, Hannah Khoddam, Geoffrey W. Corner, Sarah A. Stoycos and Mona Khaled 7. Interpersonal emotion dynamics within family relationships Rena L. Repetti and Galen D. McNeil 8. Interpersonal emotion dynamics within young adult and peer relationships Charlie Champion, Thao Ha and Thomas Dishion 9. Interpersonal emotion dynamics within intimate relationships Sharon Shenhav, Arpine Hovasapian and Belinda Campos 10. Next steps towards understanding interpersonal emotion dynamics Emily Butler. Editors Ashley K. Randall, Arizona State University Ashley K. Randall is an Associate Professor in Counseling and Counseling Psychology at Arizona State University and serves on the editorial boards for Emotion, the Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, and The Counseling Psychologist Dominik Schoebi, Université de Fribourg, Switzerland Dominik Schoebi is an Associate Professor in Psychology at the Universit? de Fribourg, Switzerland, and serves on the editorial boards for the Journal of Marriage and Family, Family Psychology, and Family Process. Contributors Ashley K. Randall, Dominik Schoebi, Laura Sels, Eva Ceulemans, Peter Kuppens, Jonathan E. Butner, Alexander O. Crenshaw, Ascher K. Munion, Alexander Wong, Brian R. W. Baucom, Jessica P. Lougheed, Tom Hollenstein, Baldwin M. Way, Alexis Keaveney, Darby Saxbe, Hannah Khoddam, Geoffrey W. Corner, Sarah A. Stoycos, Mona Khaled, Rena L. Repetti, Galen D. McNeil, Charlie Champion, Thao Ha, Thomas Dishion, Sharon Shenhav, Arpine Hovasapian, Belinda Campos, Emily Butler |