Michelle Givertz
California State University, Chico
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Publication
Featured researches published by Michelle Givertz.
Communication Research | 2014
Michelle Givertz; Chris Segrin
This study sought to examine the association between parental behavior indicative of overinvolvement and control and young adult child self-identity, namely self-efficacy and psychological entitlement. Participants in this study were 339 parent-young adult child dyads who completed survey measures of family environment, parenting, family communication, and family satisfaction. Young adults also completed measures of self-efficacy and entitlement. Results showed that balanced family adaptability and cohesion, open family communication, and authoritative rather than authoritarian parenting, were positively associated with parents’ and young adults’ family satisfaction. Parental behavior that emphasized control over the child was associated with diminished self-efficacy and exaggerated psychological entitlement in young adult children. The relationship between these two classes of variables was amplified by open parent-child communication.
Journal of Social and Personal Relationships | 2013
Michelle Givertz; Alesia Woszidlo; Chris Segrin; Kris Knutson
This study tested the prediction that spouses’ insecure attachment orientation would be negatively associated with relationship quality. It was further predicted that there would be indirect effects of attachment orientation on spouses’ relationship quality through interpersonal trust as well as indirect effects of attachment orientation on loneliness through spouses’ relationship quality. Predictions were tested on 225 married couples that completed measures of attachment orientation, personal commitment, dedication commitment, interpersonal trust, loneliness, and marital satisfaction. Tests of actor–partner interdependence revealed that insecure attachment (i.e., anxious and avoidant) was associated with lower relationship quality and that one partner’s insecure attachment was associated with his/her spouse’s report of lower relationship quality. Actor–partner mediator models revealed that interpersonal trust mediated the relationship between attachment orientation and relationship quality; insecure attachment was associated with lower levels of interpersonal trust and, in turn, lower relationship quality, both individually and dyadically. Similarly, relationship quality mediated the relationship between attachment orientation and loneliness; insecure attachment was associated with lower relationship quality and, in turn, higher levels of loneliness both individually and dyadically.
Communication Research | 2009
Michelle Givertz; Chris Segrin; Alesia Hanzal
Research and theory indicate that satisfaction is a key determinant of commitment. Because some marriages are defined by a traditional ideology that anchors commitment in a value system rather than inherent rewards of the relationship, the association between satisfaction and commitment was expected to vary by couple type. Participants completed self-report measures of relational ideology, autonomy, communication, satisfaction, and several types of commitment. Results indicated that separate couples reported the lowest marital satisfaction and personal commitment of all the couple types. Separate couples also reported the lowest dedication commitment of all the couple types, whereas traditional couples reported the highest. The opposite pattern emerged for constraint commitment; separate couples reported the highest and traditional couples reported the lowest. Finally, actor—partner interdependence models revealed strong and positive associations between satisfaction and commitment for separate couples, as well as for wives in independent couples, but no such association among traditional couples.
Journal of Family Studies | 2016
Michelle Givertz; Alesia Woszidlo; Chris Segrin; Qiaozhen Jia
ABSTRACT This study examined the associations between attachment orientation, relationship quality, and constraint commitment. It tested the prediction that insecure attachment would be negatively associated with constraint commitment, that relationship quality would be positively associated with constraint commitment, and that there would be an indirect effect of attachment insecurity on lower constraint commitment through lower relationship quality. Parallel research questions were advanced to examine if there were corresponding partner effects. Predictions were tested on 628 married couples. Tests of actor-partner interdependence revealed that attachment insecurity was associated with lower constraint commitment for both husbands and wives, and that husbands’ attachment insecurity was associated with wives’ lower constraint commitment. These same tests revealed a positive association between relationship quality and constraint commitment for husbands and wives. Tests of actor-partner interdependence mediation models revealed that attachment insecurity was indirectly associated with lower constraint commitment through lower relationship quality for both husbands and wives, and that husbands’ attachment insecurity was associated with wives’ lower constraint commitment through wives’ lower relationship quality. This study extends previous research on attachment and commitment by demonstrating that an insecure attachment orientation is associated with perceptions of lower constraint commitment through lower relationship quality, suggesting that relationship quality plays an important role in explaining the association between attachment orientation and constraint commitment.
Family Relations | 2012
Chris Segrin; Alesia Woszidlo; Michelle Givertz; Amy Bauer; Melissa Taylor Murphy
Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology | 2013
Chris Segrin; Alesia Woszidlo; Michelle Givertz; Neil Montgomery
Journal of Child and Family Studies | 2015
Chris Segrin; Michelle Givertz; Paulina Swaitkowski; Neil Montgomery
Current Psychology | 2011
Michelle Givertz; Scott M. Safford
Journal of Family Psychology | 2016
Michelle Givertz; Chris Segrin; Alesia Woszidlo
Couple and Family Psychology | 2016
Michelle Givertz; Tricia J. Burke; Chris Segrin; Alesia Woszidlo