2003
DOI: 10.1093/hcr/29.4.482
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Manifestations of Relationship Conceptualizations in Conversation

Abstract: A question fundamental to the study of interpersonal communication in close relationships is how the characteristics people associate with their relationships are evident in their conversation. We begin by explicating 3 key aspects of relationship conceptualizations: reliance on relational knowledge, interdependence, and mutual commitment. Then we advance hypotheses linking those relationship conceptualizations with features of people's content and relational messages. We report the results of a study in which… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Through its effect on dyadic synchrony, relational turbulence is likely to promote topically incoherent patterns of interaction that make it difficult for partners to develop and articulate shared goals and a plan that integrates their respective interests. Topic coherence, dyadic pronoun use, and turn‐taking fluency are examples of possible indices of these processes (e.g., Knobloch, ; Knobloch & Solomon, ). In sum, we predict that relational turbulence undermines collaborative planning.…”
Section: The Consequences Of Relational Turbulencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Through its effect on dyadic synchrony, relational turbulence is likely to promote topically incoherent patterns of interaction that make it difficult for partners to develop and articulate shared goals and a plan that integrates their respective interests. Topic coherence, dyadic pronoun use, and turn‐taking fluency are examples of possible indices of these processes (e.g., Knobloch, ; Knobloch & Solomon, ). In sum, we predict that relational turbulence undermines collaborative planning.…”
Section: The Consequences Of Relational Turbulencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Relational communication carries both content and relationship messages and is the mechanism through which partners interpret each other’s actions (Dillard, Solomon, & Palmer, 1999). Partners are more inclined to engage in relationship talk when they are mutually committed (Knobloch & Solomon, 2003). Accordingly, commitment becomes relational when communicated in some way to one’s partner (Ballard‐Reisch & Weigel, 1999; Knapp & Taylor, 1994).…”
Section: Behavioral Indicators Of Commitmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Highly committed partners use “we” pronouns more frequently when writing about their romantic relationships compared to less committed ones (Agnew, Van Lange, Rusbult, & Langston, 1998). Nonetheless, in the small handful of published studies that have examined language use during interactions between romantic partners, the use of “we” surprisingly showed no association with relationship satisfaction (Sillars et al, 1997; Simmons et al, 2005) and only a marginal association with relational interdependence (Knobloch & Solomon, 2003).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%