“…With respect to the current focus on affective associations, targets may be more likely to attribute affect resulting from actors' typical partner-regulation behaviors to those actors and more likely to attribute it to something else (e.g., the problem, self) when it is atypical of those actors, and such emerging associations should have important implications for motivation. Research is consistent with these ideas (e.g., Forest, Kille, Wood, & Holmes, 2014;Jayamaha & Overall, 2015). In one study, Jayamaha and Overall (2015) demonstrated that oppositional behaviors motivated less change in targets when enacted by actors with low self-esteem, who tend to overact to problems (e.g., Lemay & Dudley, 2011), than when enacted by actors with high self-esteem.…”