Relationship commitment in athletic dyads: Actor and partner effects for Big Five self- and other-ratings

This study explored actor and partner effects for Big Five self- and other-ratings (i.e., ratings of the partner's traits) with respect to relationship commitment. Among a sample of athlete-athlete (i.e., sporting) dyads, actor-partner interdependence model analyses revealed that athletes repor...

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Main Authors: Jackson, B., Dimmock, J., Gucciardi, Daniel, Grove, J.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/28743
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author Jackson, B.
Dimmock, J.
Gucciardi, Daniel
Grove, J.
author_facet Jackson, B.
Dimmock, J.
Gucciardi, Daniel
Grove, J.
author_sort Jackson, B.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This study explored actor and partner effects for Big Five self- and other-ratings (i.e., ratings of the partner's traits) with respect to relationship commitment. Among a sample of athlete-athlete (i.e., sporting) dyads, actor-partner interdependence model analyses revealed that athletes reported greater commitment to their partnership not only when they rated themselves as highly agreeable, conscientious, or open to experience, but also when they scored their partners favorably on these same traits. Dyad members were also more committed when their partner rated him/herself as highly agreeable and/or conscientious. By modeling actor and partner effects simultaneously for self- as well as other-ratings, these findings provide novel insight into the way that both forms of trait perception align independently with relationship quality. © 2010 Elsevier Inc.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-287432017-09-13T15:17:11Z Relationship commitment in athletic dyads: Actor and partner effects for Big Five self- and other-ratings Jackson, B. Dimmock, J. Gucciardi, Daniel Grove, J. This study explored actor and partner effects for Big Five self- and other-ratings (i.e., ratings of the partner's traits) with respect to relationship commitment. Among a sample of athlete-athlete (i.e., sporting) dyads, actor-partner interdependence model analyses revealed that athletes reported greater commitment to their partnership not only when they rated themselves as highly agreeable, conscientious, or open to experience, but also when they scored their partners favorably on these same traits. Dyad members were also more committed when their partner rated him/herself as highly agreeable and/or conscientious. By modeling actor and partner effects simultaneously for self- as well as other-ratings, these findings provide novel insight into the way that both forms of trait perception align independently with relationship quality. © 2010 Elsevier Inc. 2010 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/28743 10.1016/j.jrp.2010.08.004 Elsevier restricted
spellingShingle Jackson, B.
Dimmock, J.
Gucciardi, Daniel
Grove, J.
Relationship commitment in athletic dyads: Actor and partner effects for Big Five self- and other-ratings
title Relationship commitment in athletic dyads: Actor and partner effects for Big Five self- and other-ratings
title_full Relationship commitment in athletic dyads: Actor and partner effects for Big Five self- and other-ratings
title_fullStr Relationship commitment in athletic dyads: Actor and partner effects for Big Five self- and other-ratings
title_full_unstemmed Relationship commitment in athletic dyads: Actor and partner effects for Big Five self- and other-ratings
title_short Relationship commitment in athletic dyads: Actor and partner effects for Big Five self- and other-ratings
title_sort relationship commitment in athletic dyads: actor and partner effects for big five self- and other-ratings
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/28743