Volume 38, Issue 2 pp. 143-158

What Predicts Change in Marital Interaction Over Time? A Study of Alternative Models

JOHN MORDECHAI GOTTMAN Ph.D.

JOHN MORDECHAI GOTTMAN Ph.D.

James Mifflin Professor of Psychology, Department of Psychology, University of Washington, Box 351525, Seattle WA 98195; e-mail: [email protected] .

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ROBERT WAYNE LEVENSON Ph.D.

ROBERT WAYNE LEVENSON Ph.D.

Director, Institute for Personality Research, Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley.

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First published: 28 July 2004
Citations: 103

Abstract

This is a report on what predicts the deterioration of affective marital interaction over a 4-year period. Four models were compared for their ability to predict Time-2 dysfunctional marital interaction (a set of reliable predictors of marital dissolution). These four models were: (1) baseline physiology at Time-1; (2) interaction physiology at Time-1; (3) a balance model based on the ratio of positivity to negativity at Time-1; and, (4) cognitions about the relationship operationalized from our coding of the Oral History Interview. All four models predicted Time-2 dysfunctional marital interaction. All four models were also able to predict change, operationalized as predicting Time-2 interaction, controlling for Time-1 interaction, that is, using a covariance regression analysis. The most powerful model in predicting change was the balance ratio model.

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