2018
DOI: 10.1007/s10826-018-1074-8
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Coping With Remembrances of Parental Rejection in Childhood: Gender Differences and Associations With Intimate Partner Relationships

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Cited by 5 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
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“…IPARTheory's emphasis on mental activity leads to the expectation that specific social cognitive capabilities allow some children and adults to cope with perceived rejection more effectively than others. These capabilities include a clearly differentiated sense of self, a sense of self‐determination, and the ability to depersonalize (Ki, Rohner, Britner, Halgunseth, & Rigazio‐DiGilio, ; Rohner, , ). More specifically, the coping subtheory expects that the capacity of individuals to cope with rejection is enhanced to the degree that they have a clearly differentiated sense of self, one aspect of which is a sense of self‐determination.…”
Section: The Subtheories Of Ipartheorymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…IPARTheory's emphasis on mental activity leads to the expectation that specific social cognitive capabilities allow some children and adults to cope with perceived rejection more effectively than others. These capabilities include a clearly differentiated sense of self, a sense of self‐determination, and the ability to depersonalize (Ki, Rohner, Britner, Halgunseth, & Rigazio‐DiGilio, ; Rohner, , ). More specifically, the coping subtheory expects that the capacity of individuals to cope with rejection is enhanced to the degree that they have a clearly differentiated sense of self, one aspect of which is a sense of self‐determination.…”
Section: The Subtheories Of Ipartheorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Theoretically and empirically, the coping process is the least well‐developed portion of IPARTheory (Ki et al, ). As is true for most other bodies of research on the coping process (e.g., Tamres, Janicki, & Helgeson, ), little is known with confidence about the mechanisms and processes that help answer coping subtheory's basic question of how individuals are able to develop resilience in the face of interpersonal rejection.…”
Section: Future Directions For Ipartheory and Overview Of The Specialmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Buna göre, kadın katılımcılar, erkeklere göre partnerlerinden daha fazla sıcaklık ve şefkat algıladıklarını; erkekler ise kadınlara göre partnerlerinden daha fazla öfke ve saldırganlık algıladıklarını ifade etmişlerdir. Evli olmayan ancak romantik ilişkisi olan katılımcılarla yürütülen kabul-red çalışmalarının çoğunda da benzer bulgular elde edilmiştir (Chyung ve Lee, 2008;Khaleque ve Rohner 2013;Ki, Rohner, Britner, Halgunseth ve Rigazio-DiGilio, 2018).…”
Section: Discussionunclassified
“…In line with IPARTheory and attachment theory, if a child struggles with childhood parental rejection, they are more likely to struggle in their adult romantic relationships (Ki et al, 2018). Childhood relationships to important figures serve as a model for later relationships (Ki et al, 2018;Rohner & Khaleque, 2002).…”
Section: Potential Outcomes and Mediatorsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…IPARTheory attempts to explain the antecedents, correlates, and consequences of perceived relational acceptance or rejection (Rohner & Khaleque, 2002). Originally rooted in work with children, IPARTheory encompasses adult memories of childhood acceptance-rejection, perceptions of current adulthood acceptance-rejection, and how those perceptions influence psychological maladjustment (Khaleque & Ali, 2017;Ki et al, 2018). Studies indicate that when relationships are perceived as warm and loving, people are psychologically well adjusted.…”
Section: Interpersonal Acceptance-rejection Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%