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Featured researches published by Katya Ivanova.


Journal of Early Adolescence | 2012

Who Dates? The Effects of Temperament, Puberty, and Parenting on Early Adolescent Experience with Dating: The TRAILS Study.

Katya Ivanova; René Veenstra; Melinda Mills

This article focuses on how temperament, pubertal maturation, and perception of parenting behaviors affect the propensity to date in early adolescence (mean age = 13.55). Hypotheses are tested with a representative sample of 2,230 Dutch adolescents, the TRacking Adolescents’ Individual Lives Survey (TRAILS). The results suggest that adolescents are more likely to have experience with dating when they score higher on the need for high-intensity pleasure, pubertal maturation, and perceived parental rejection. Shyness, on the other hand, has the opposite effect. In addition, a moderation effect is observed such that the more rejecting the parents are perceived to be, the less effect the temperament characteristic of high-intensity pleasure has on dating. Future research should investigate in further detail whether dating could be seen as a way for early adolescents to establish their grown-up status or as a way to compensate for heightened parental rejection.


Journal of Social and Personal Relationships | 2016

Relationship satisfaction of the previously married The significance of relationship specific costs and rewards in first and repartnering unions

Katya Ivanova

This work examined if the association between relationship specific costs / rewards and relationship satisfaction differed between previously married and never married before individuals. The question addressed was whether going through partnership dissolution could be linked to differences in how people experienced the positive (i.e., support, companionship), as well as, the negative (i.e., conflict, inequity in give and take) aspects of their intimate relationships. Longitudinal Dutch data (the Netherlands Kinship Panel Study, NKPS) were utilized to estimate person-level random-effects models. Indeed, at high costs, the previously married reported significantly lower relationship satisfaction than the never-married-before; furthermore, at low reward levels, those in first partnerships reported significantly higher relationship satisfaction than their repartnering counterparts.


Youth & Society | 2018

Adolescents’ Involvement in Romantic Relationships and Problem Behavior: The Moderating Effect of Peer Norms:

Pascale I. van Zantvliet; Katya Ivanova; Ellen Verbakel

This study examined how peer norms condition the effect of romantic involvement on adolescents’ externalizing and internalizing problem behaviors. We hypothesized that, as a result of social control and social learning, adolescents who start a romantic relationship report more problem behavior when romantic involvement was not normative behavior in the peer group. We tested this hypothesis for two different peer groups: the friendship network and the class. Using large-scale panel data of Dutch adolescents (N = 2,302; Mage = 14.5) collected in 222 school classes that included sociometric measures, we found that adolescents who started dating reported more problem behavior if dating was not in line with the class’ norm compared with when dating was in line with the class’ norm. Friends’ norms did not moderate the association between romantic involvement and problem behavior.


Archive | 2017

What’s a (Childless) Man Without a Woman? The Differential Importance of Couple Dynamics for the Wellbeing of Childless Men and Women in the Netherlands

Renske Keizer; Katya Ivanova

Using rich couple data from the Netherlands Kinship Panel Study, we investigated to what extent there were gender differences in couple dynamics within childless couples (N = 163). Though the childless partners reported similar relationship satisfaction, we found gender differences in the link between relationship conflict and relationship satisfaction - the childless men were more strongly affected by the negative aspects of the partnership. This gender difference was not evident for the association between partner support and relationship satisfaction - the positive aspects of the partnership were equally important for the male and the female childless partners. Furthermore, the association between relationship satisfaction and health was stronger for the childless men than for the childless women and this difference was particularly evident when the levels of relationship satisfaction were low. These results indicate that when they are in unsatisfying romantic relationships, childless men are at a greater risk than childless women of physical and mental ill health.


Journal of Family Issues | 2017

Same-Sex and Mixed-Sex Couples in the Netherlands: The Association Between Life Satisfaction and Relationship Dynamics:

Samantha L. Tornello; Katya Ivanova; Henny Bos

Using a national sample of Dutch (N = 5,854) individuals in same-sex and mixed-sex relationships we explored the associations between relationship dynamics, both positive (partner support) and negative (conflict), and life satisfaction. We found that individuals in same-sex relationships reported lower life satisfaction compared with their peers in mixed-sex relationships but there were no differences in the amount of partner support or level of relationship conflict. Across all couples, greater partner support and lower relationship conflict was associated with greater individual life satisfaction. Interestingly, for individuals in mixed-sex relationships, low level of conflict was associated with greater life satisfaction, whereas the association was not as pronounced for individuals in same-sex relationships. In sum, the impact of some relationship factors (such as conflict) on individual life satisfaction may vary in different ways across couple type.


European Journal of Population-revue Europeenne De Demographie | 2013

The Effect of Children on Men’s and Women’s Chances of Re-partnering in a European Context

Katya Ivanova; Matthijs Kalmijn; Wilfred Uunk


Journal of Research on Adolescence | 2011

The Initiation of Dating in Adolescence: The Effect of Parental Divorce. The TRAILS Study.

Katya Ivanova; Melinda Mills; René Veenstra


Advances in Life Course Research | 2014

Fertility after repartnering in the Netherlands: Parenthood or commitment?

Katya Ivanova; Matthijs Kalmijn; Wilfred Uunk


The Public policy and aging report | 2015

Aging Without Children

Katya Ivanova; Pearl A. Dykstra


Journal of Marriage and Family | 2014

Parental Residential and Partnering Transitions and the Initiation of Adolescent Romantic Relationships

Katya Ivanova; Melinda Mills; René Veenstra

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Renske Keizer

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Derek A. Kreager

Pennsylvania State University

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Ellen Verbakel

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Henny Bos

University of Amsterdam

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