Results 111 to 120 of about 30,662 (160)
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Equity and Depression Among Married Couples
Social Psychology Quarterly, 1980This study examines the relationship between equitylinequity and depression among married partners. The respondents are 333 married couples (666 respondents) from a midwestern state who were selected in a random sample based on population concentration.
R B, Schafer, P M, Keith
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1993
Abstract Saint Paul’s Epistle to the Ephesians says: “This is a great mystery (5: 32).” Paul is speaking of the relationship between husband and wife, which for him is a metaphor for the relationship between Christ and the church. His words are constantly used in Christian discussions of marriage.
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Abstract Saint Paul’s Epistle to the Ephesians says: “This is a great mystery (5: 32).” Paul is speaking of the relationship between husband and wife, which for him is a metaphor for the relationship between Christ and the church. His words are constantly used in Christian discussions of marriage.
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Married Couples Group Psychotherapy
Archives of General Psychiatry, 1966PSYCHOTHERAPY techniques for working with family members as a unit are receiving increasing interest. One of these new methods is the psychotherapy of groups composed exclusively of married couples. Specific therapeutic advantages have been claimed, but serious theoretical and practical objections have also been raised. This clinical report will focus,
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Journal of Nonverbal Behavior, 1980
This study examined the looking behavior of married couples during a 10 minute interaction segment. The variables examined included marital adjustment level, interaction role (speaking or listening) and type of message. Wives were more likely to look at their spouses than husbands were, and speakers were more likely to look at their partners than were ...
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This study examined the looking behavior of married couples during a 10 minute interaction segment. The variables examined included marital adjustment level, interaction role (speaking or listening) and type of message. Wives were more likely to look at their spouses than husbands were, and speakers were more likely to look at their partners than were ...
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The Taxation of Married Couples
Business & Society, 2001The inherent conflict in the taxation of married couples versus single individuals is examined. With competing social and economic outcomes, the taxation of married couples is tied to societal values and the political environment. The authors illustrate the issue by describing three methods of personal income taxation currently used across the globe ...
Virginia W. Gerde, Craig G. White
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Communication Awareness in Married Couples
Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 1986Forty-six married couples participated in a standard communication task. When encoding messages they made a rating of clarity on a six-point scale, and when decoding they made a rating of confidence. Highly and moderately adjusted subjects were more confident for messages they decoded correctly than for those they decoded incorrectly.
Noller P., Venardos C.
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Jealousy in South-Italian Married Couples
Psychological Reports, 1988The author analyzed associations of jealousy with demographic variables for 144 South-Italians. Hansen's hypothetical jealousy-producing events, modified into a bivalent form, were submitted to both partners of 72 married couples. High jealousy of couples having no children and living in the country was noted.
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1990
The two most common measures used to ascertain the economic position of a family are the size of its income and the size of its wealth. Income is generally measured over a period of one year, while wealth is measured as a stock in terms of the value of all assets less all debts at a particular time.
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The two most common measures used to ascertain the economic position of a family are the size of its income and the size of its wealth. Income is generally measured over a period of one year, while wealth is measured as a stock in terms of the value of all assets less all debts at a particular time.
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The Concurrent Analysis of Married Couples
The Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 1948(1948). The Concurrent Analysis of Married Couples. The Psychoanalytic Quarterly: Vol. 17, No. 2, pp. 182-197.
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Married Couples Admitted to Mental Hospital
British Journal of Psychiatry, 1968A number of studies have demonstrated that married pairs in which both partners have, or have had, a psychological illness are substantially commoner than would be expected by chance. These have been reviewed elsewhere (Kreitman, 1964; Nielsen, 1964).
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