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Social Psychology David Myers 10e Copyright 2010 McGraw-Hill Companies Chapter Eleven • Attraction and Intimacy: Liking and Loving Others What Leads to Friendship and Attraction? • Proximity – Geographical nearness; functional distance – Interaction • Availability What Leads to Friendship and Attraction? • Anticipation of Interaction – Mere exposure • Tendency for novel stimuli to be liked more or rated more positively after the rater has been repeatedly exposed to them – Exposure without awareness leads to liking What Leads to Friendship and Attraction? • Physical Attractiveness – Attractiveness and dating • Looks are a predictor of how often one dates • Looks influence voting What Leads to Friendship and Attraction? • Physical Attractiveness – The Matching phenomenon • Tendency for men and women to choose as partners those who are a “good match” in attractiveness and other traits What Leads to Friendship and Attraction? Physical Attractiveness Physical-attractiveness stereotype Presumption that physically attractive people possess other socially desirable traits as well First impressions Is the “Beautiful is Good” stereotype accurate? Attractive people are valued and favored, and so many develop more social self-confidence • Self-fulfilling prophecy What Leads to Friendship and Attraction? • Physical Attractiveness – Who is attractive? • Whatever people of any given place and time find attractive – Perfect average – Symmetry What Leads to Friendship and Attraction? • Physical Attractiveness – Evolution and attraction • Assumption that beauty signals biologically important information – Health – Youth – Fertility What Leads to Friendship and Attraction? • Physical Attractiveness – Social comparison • Contrast effect – Attractiveness of those we love • We see likable people as attractive What Leads to Friendship and Attraction? • Similarity versus Complementarity – Do birds of a feather flock together? • Likeness begets liking • Dissimilarity breeds dislike What Leads to Friendship and Attraction? • Similarity versus Complementarity – Do opposites attract? • Complementarity – Popularly supposed tendency, in a relationship between two people, for each to complete what is missing in the other What Leads to Friendship and Attraction? • Liking Those Who Like Us – Attribution • Ingratiation – Use of strategies, such as flattery , by which people seek to gain another’s favor What Leads to Friendship and Attraction? • Liking Those Who Like Us – Attribution • Self-esteem and attraction – How we feel about ourselves determines how we feel about our relationships What Leads to Friendship and Attraction? • Relationship Rewards – Reward theory of attraction • Theory that we like those whose behavior is rewarding to us or whom we associate with rewarding events What Is Love? • Passionate Love – Emotional, exciting, and intense • Expressed physically Figure 11.7 What Is Love? • Passionate Love – Theory of passionate love • Two-factor theory of emotion – Suggests that in a romantic context, arousal from any source, even painful experiences, can be steered into passion What Is Love? • Passionate Love – Variations in love: culture and gender • Marriages for love versus arranged marriages Figure 11.9 What Is Love? • Companionate Love – Affection we feel for those with whom our lives are deeply intertwined • Occurs after passionate love fades Figure 11.7 What Enables Close Relationships? • Attachment – Our need to belong is adaptive – Parents and children – Friends – Spouses or lovers What Enables Close Relationships? • Attachment – Attachment styles • Secure attachment – Rooted in trust and marked by intimacy • Preoccupied attachment – Marked by a sense of one’s own unworthiness and anxiety, ambivalence, and possessiveness What Enables Close Relationships? • Attachment – Attachment styles • Dismissive attachment – Avoidant relationship style marked by distrust of others • Fearful attachment – Avoidant relationship style marked by fear of rejection What Enables Close Relationships? • Equity – Condition in which the outcomes people receive from a relationship are proportional to what they contribute to it • Long-term equity – As people observe their partners being self-giving, their sense of trust grows • Perceived equity and satisfaction What Enables Close Relationships? • Self-Disclosure – Revealing intimate aspects of oneself to others • Disclosure reciprocity – Tendency for one person’s intimacy or self-disclosure to match that of a conversational partner Figure 11.11 How Do Relationships End? • Divorce – Rates varied widely by country – Individualistic cultures have more divorce than do communal cultures How Do Relationships End? • Detachment Process – Alternatives to exiting a relationship • Loyalty – Waiting for conditions to improve • Neglect – Ignore the partner and allow the relationship to deteriorate • Voice concerns – Take active steps to improve relationship