Two Key Studies of Explanations for why Relationships Change or End (DP IB Psychology)

Revision Note

Last updated

Key study one: Mitnick et al. (2009)

Aim:  To investigate changes in satisfaction levels of couples after becoming parents compared to couples who have not had children (with reference to Duck’s phase model)

 Participants:

  • Samples from the data of 37 US-based longitudinal studies tracking first-time parents from pregnancy up to the child being about a year old

  • 4 longitudinal studies of childless couples were used for comparison

  • A total of almost 6,000 individual samples were included in the study

Procedure:

  • A meta-analysis was conducted using research articles of couples with and without children dating from as far back as 1887 up to and including 2006

  • The researchers identified keywords which formed the basis of the research, for example:

    • ‘transition’

    • ‘parenthood’

    • ‘relationship satisfaction’

  • The researchers also obtained unpublished research from key researchers in the field of relationships to add to their findings

  • The studies included in the meta-analysis were generally self-report questionnaires and surveys which used rating scales to measure the level of satisfaction expressed by the participants

 Results:

  • There was a significant decline in relationship satisfaction for the couples who had children compared to the childless couples:

    • This decline was particularly true for the first couple of years after the first child had been born

    • There was a good deal of variability in the above finding, with some couples recording large decreases in satisfaction compared to slight increases in some cases

    • The above findings are relevant to Duck’s intra-psychic and dyadic phases of his model in which dissatisfaction is a key trigger for the onset of relationship breakdown

Conclusion: Becoming first-time parents may affect the satisfaction levels of a relationship, with most impact on the relationship being negative

Evaluation of Mitnick et al. (2009)

Strengths

  • This meta-analysis used a variety of statistical measures, which is an objective and consistent way of conducting the procedure which increases the reliability of the findings

  • The study lends support to the idea that there may be a common pattern to relationship breakdown as predicted by Duck’s phase model:

    • A stress point (in this case the birth of a child) threatens the relationship

    • Dissatisfaction is expressed, which may be shared with the other person and which may ultimately lead to the relationship being terminated

 Limitations

  • A meta-analysis cannot hope to fully explore (or explain) why and how relationship breakdown occurs as it ignores both individual differences and qualitative methodology, for example:

    • The lack of satisfaction expressed may have already existed before the birth of the first child

    • Some couples may express dissatisfaction more easily than others - but this does not mean that they necessarily feel dissatisfied

    • A lack of qualitative data robs the study of explanatory power, the ‘why’ of relationship breakdown

  • One of the issues with this study is that it measures satisfaction up to only one year after the birth of the child, which means that long-term effects of becoming a parent and the effect on satisfaction are unknown

Key study two: Felmlee (1995)

Aim: To investigate the fatal attraction hypothesis (FAH) as an explanation for relationship breakdown.

Participants: 301 students from the University of California 

Procedure: 

  • The participants completed a self-report in which asked them to list the qualities that had first attracted them to a recent partner

  • After making this list they were then asked to list the qualities that they least liked about that person.

Results: 

  • Felmlee identified 88 (almost 30%) of what she termed FA break-ups

  • These FA relationships could be defined as being relationships based on the other person having qualities that initially provoked excitement or fascination

  • Felmlee identified three patterns that are typical of FA breakdowns:

    • 1. Fun to foolish: This was the most common reason for relationship failure:

      • A ‘fun’, outgoing, party loving person is gradually seen as immature, irresponsible and foolish by their partner

    • 2. Strong to domineering: The attraction here might be based on someone who offers strength, who has definite opinions and a reassuring presence:

      • These traits may be perceived as being dictatorial, bossy, forceful and overbearing after a while

    • 3. Spontaneous to unpredictable: This describes the sort of person who may suddenly suggest a weekend in Paris out of the blue: 

      • The person initially appears to be living in the moment, living life to the full,  but they may ultimately be viewed as having a lack of focus, being unreliable, inconsistent and just overall ‘flaky’.

Conclusion: There does seem to be a consistent and predictable pattern to FA relationships

Evaluation of Felmlee (1995)

Strengths

  • The study could be said to have good validity:

    • Patterns in the data do seem to support the fatal attraction hypothesis

    • Additionally, there is plenty of anecdotal evidence and real-world observations that back up Felmlee’s findings (there is even a film called ‘Fatal Attraction’ which the theory takes its name from)

  • This theory attempts to explain why relationships break down, as opposed to Duck’s phase model which simply charts the progression of relationship breakdown

Limitations  

  • The sample is ethnocentric as it only used students from the University of California,making it limited in generalisability

    • The FAH is biased towards individualistic cultures

    • Collectivist cultures do not necessarily conform to the FAH:

      • People from collectivist cultures are less likely to actively choose unsuitable partners, particularly if the tradition is for arranged marriages

      • Having several ‘experimental’ relationships - particularly in cultures where marriage is highly valued - would be frowned upon and may render the person unsuitable for marriage

Worked Example

ERQ (EXTENDED RESPONSE QUESTION) 22 MARKS

The question is, ‘Evaluate research into explanations for why relationships change or end.’ [22]

This question is asking you to provide strengths and limitations on research into explanations for why relationships change or end. Here is one paragraph for guidance:

One study that could be considered in the light of Duck’s phase model is Mitnick et al (2009). This meta-analysis investigated changes in the satisfaction levels of couples after they had become parents compared to couples who did not have children. Applying Duck’s phase model to this research it becomes clear that the arrival of a new child might promote the initial self-questioning associated with stage 1, the intra-psychic phase. Almost 6,000 individual samples were included in the study, with data taken from research dating as far back as 1887 up to 2006, making this quantitative data reliable due to the large sample size but lacking in validity due to the lack of qualitative data. There is, however, some question as to the reliability of using secondary data, particularly with very dated research findings).

You've read 0 of your 10 free revision notes

Unlock more, it's free!

Join the 100,000+ Students that ❤️ Save My Exams

the (exam) results speak for themselves:

Did this page help you?