Prediction Extramarital Relations (treason) on the Basis of Schemas in Couples who Applicant to Divorce

Mahdi DehghanHarati, Habib khalagi, Ebrahim Shirvani, Saeed SalmaniNodoushan

Abstract


The aim of this study was to predict extramarital relationships (betrayal) based on gender schemas. Methods: The present study was correlational and forecasts. The study population were all Couples who Applicant to Divorce referred to medical centers in Shiraz and 300 people were selected by multistage random sampling. In this study, data were collected by Inventory meta-marital relationships and Bem gender Schema Questionnaire. First, the coefficient of correlation was obtained, then the data were analyzed by regression analysis. Results: the results showed that gender schemas, significantly and positively will predict spouses extramarital relations. Conclusion: According to study findings, we can say that there is a significant relationship between gender schemas as a psychological components and meta-marital relationships.

Full Text:

PDF 75-80

References


Amato, P. R., & Rogers, S. J. (1997). A longitudinal study of marital problems and subsequent divorce. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 612-624.

Atkins, D. C., Baucom, D. H., & Jacobson, N. S. (2001). Understanding infidelity: correlates in a national random sample. Journal of family psychology, 15(4), 735.

Bamber, M. R. (2006). CBT for occupational stress in health professionals: introducing a schema-focused approach: Routledge.

Bem, S. L. (1981). Gender schema theory: A cognitive account of sex typing. Psychological review, 88(4), 354.

Bem, S. L., & Lewis, S. A. (1975). Sex role adaptability: One consequence of psychological androgyny. Journal of personality and social psychology, 31(4), 634.

Black, M., & Joffee, W. (1978). A lawyer/therapist team approach to divorce. Family Court Review, 16(1), 1-5.

Denton, M. L. (2012). Family structure, family disruption, and profiles of adolescent religiosity. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 51(1), 42-64.

Farokhi, S., Fazel, A., & Rezaee, A. M. (2017). Forecast role of personality characteristics and public health extra-marital relationships (emotional and sexual) in married men and women. Indian Journal of Health and Wellbeing, 8(2), 104.

Farzad, M. D. H. E. S. (2017). Compare Emotional Intelligence, Extramarital Relations (treason) and Unstable Marriage in Women Want a Divorce and Normal Women. South journal of Educational Psychology and Counseling, 4(1).

Glass, S. P., & Wright, T. L. (1997). Reconstructing marriages after the trauma of infidelity.

Gottman, J. M. (2013). Marital interaction: Experimental investigations: Elsevier.

Gottman, J. M. (2014). What predicts divorce?: The relationship between marital processes and marital outcomes: Psychology Press.

Hays, D. G. (2014). Assessment in counseling: A guide to the use of psychological assessment procedures: John Wiley & Sons.

Jeanfreau, M. M. (2009). A qualitative study investigating the decision-making process of women's participation in marital infidelity: Kansas state university.

Johnson, C. A., Stanley, S. M., Glenn, N. D., Amato, P. R., Nock, S. L., Markman, H. J., & Dion, M. R. (2002). Marriage in Oklahoma: 2001 baseline statewide survey on marriage and divorce. Bureau for Social research, Oklahoma State University.

McKenna, W. T. (2015). Catholic Marital Infidelity Treatment: A psychotherapeutic guide: The Institute for the Psychological Sciences.

Morris, M. L., & Carter, S. A. (1999). Transition to marriage: A literature review. Journal of family and consumer sciences education, 17(1), 1-21.

Munsch, C. L. (2015). Her support, his support: Money, masculinity, and marital infidelity. American Sociological Review, 80(3), 469-495.

Neisser, U. (2014). Cognitive psychology: Classic edition: Psychology Press.

Peleg, O. (2008). The relation between differentiation of self and marital satisfaction: What can be learned from married people over the course of life? The American Journal of Family Therapy, 36(5), 388-401.

Rice, F. P. (1998). Human development: A life-span approach: Prentice Hall.

Safari, S., Namdari, K., Sepanta, M., Dehghani, S., Maanavi, T., Kamali, A., & Abedi, A. (2014). The effectiveness of Cognitive behavior therapy with focuses on Religious Beliefs in Reduction Damages caused by Marital Infidelity (A single subject study). Comparison of attachment styles and coping strategies among incarcerated criminals and normal people, 8, 31.

Sarmad, Z., Bazargan, A., & Hejazi, E. (2004). Research methods in behavioral sciences. Tehran: Agah Publication, 132-137.

Wearden, A., Peters, I., Berry, K., Barrowclough, C., & Liversidge, T. (2008). Adult attachment, parenting experiences, and core beliefs about self and others. Personality and Individual Differences, 44(5), 1246-1257.

Wilcox, W. B., & Wolfinger, N. H. (2007). Then comes marriage? Religion, race, and marriage in urban America. Social Science Research, 36(2), 569-589.

Yoosefi, N., Etemadi, O., Bahrami, F., Fatehizade, M. A.-S., & Ahmadi, S. A. (2010). An investigation on early maladaptive schema in marital relationship as predictors of divorce. Journal of Divorce & Remarriage, 51(5), 269-292.


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


© World of Researchers Publication, Iranian Journal of Positive Psychology