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Dive into the research topics where Ruixue Zhaoyang is active.

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Featured researches published by Ruixue Zhaoyang.


Journal of Personality | 2011

Motivational Pursuits in the Context of Human Sexual Relationships

M. Lynne Cooper; Lindsay L. Barber; Ruixue Zhaoyang; Amelia E. Talley

The current article examines how close relationships combine with individual differences in sex motives (Cooper, Shapiro, & Powers, 1998) to shape sexual experience. We first provide an overview of the motivational approach as it relates to sexual behavior and then describe 2 broad mechanisms (1 transactional, the other interactional) by which motives and relational context combine to shape behavior. Drawing on our past research, we review evidence showing that people select relationship contexts based partly on their motives and that these contexts in turn shape future motives and behavior; that partner motives shape sexual experience above and beyond ones own motives; and that both the broader relationship context and partner motives moderate the effects of ones own motives on sexual experience. We conclude that the nature of motivational pursuits cannot be adequately understood in the abstract, but rather we must take into account the relational context in which ones needs are pursued.


The Journal of Positive Psychology | 2016

Positive psychology in context: : Effects of expressing gratitude in ongoing relationships depend on perceptions of enactor responsiveness

Sara B. Algoe; Ruixue Zhaoyang

Recent correlational evidence implicates gratitude in personal and relational growth, for both members of ongoing relationships. From these observations, it would be tempting to prescribe interpersonal gratitude exercises to improve relationships. In this experiment, couples were randomly assigned to express gratitude over a month, or to a relationally active control condition. Results showed modest effects of condition on personal and relational well-being. However, those whose partners were perceived as being particularly responsive when expressing gratitude at the initial lab session showed greater well-being across a range of outcomes, whereas this was not so for people in the control condition. Notably, evidence raises concerns about the effectiveness of artificial injections of gratitude when the partner is perceived to be low in responsiveness. Given the importance of close relationships, this work highlights the need for more theory-driven basic research tested in context before assuming what appears to work naturally will also work artificially.


Journal of Personalized Medicine | 2015

Common Genetic Risk for Melanoma Encourages Preventive Behavior Change

Lori Diseati; Laura B. Scheinfeldt; Rachel Kasper; Ruixue Zhaoyang; Neda Gharani; Tara J. Schmidlen; Erynn S. Gordon; Cecili K. Sessions; Susan K. Delaney; Joseph P. Jarvis; Norman P. Gerry; Michael F. Christman

There is currently great interest in using genetic risk estimates for common disease in personalized healthcare. Here we assess melanoma risk-related preventive behavioral change in the context of the Coriell Personalized Medicine Collaborative (CPMC). As part of on-going reporting activities within the project, participants received a personalized risk assessment including information related to their own self-reported family history of melanoma and a genetic risk variant showing a moderate effect size (1.7, 3.0 respectively for heterozygous and homozygous individuals). Participants who opted to view their report were sent an optional outcome survey assessing risk perception and behavioral change in the months that followed. Participants that report family history risk, genetic risk, or both risk factors for melanoma were significantly more likely to increase skin cancer preventive behaviors when compared to participants with neither risk factor (ORs = 2.04, 2.79, 4.06 and p-values = 0.02, 2.86 × 10−5, 4.67 × 10−5, respectively), and we found the relationship between risk information and behavior to be partially mediated by anxiety. Genomic risk assessments appear to encourage positive behavioral change in a manner that is complementary to family history risk information and therefore may represent a useful addition to standard of care for melanoma prevention.


Health Psychology | 2017

Morning self-efficacy predicts physical activity throughout the day in knee osteoarthritis.

Ruixue Zhaoyang; Lynn M. Martire; Martin J. Sliwinski

Objective: The purpose of this study was to examine the within-day and cross-day prospective effects of knee osteoarthritis (OA) patients’ self-efficacy to engage in physical activity despite the pain on their subsequent physical activity assessed objectively in their natural environment. Method: Over 22 days, 135 older adults with knee OA reported their morning self-efficacy for being physically active throughout the day using a handheld computer and wore an accelerometer to measure moderate activity and steps. Results: Morning self-efficacy had a significant positive effect on steps and moderate-intensity activity throughout that day, above and beyond the effects of demographic background and other psychosocial factors as well as spouses’ support and social control. The lagged effect of morning self-efficacy on the next day’s physical activity and the reciprocal lagged effect of physical activity on the next day’s self-efficacy were not significant. Positive between-person effects of self-efficacy on physical activity were found. Conclusions: Future research should aim to better understand the mechanisms underlying fluctuations in patients’ daily self-efficacy, and target patients’ daily self-efficacy as a modifiable psychological mechanism for promoting physical activity.


Psychology and Aging | 2018

Age differences in adults’ daily social interactions: An ecological momentary assessment study.

Ruixue Zhaoyang; Martin J. Sliwinski; Lynn M. Martire; Joshua M. Smyth

Prevailing research has suggested that social relationships get better with age, but this evidence has been largely based on studies with lengthy reporting intervals. Using an ecological momentary assessment approach, the present study examined age differences in several characteristics of social interactions as reported in near-real time: the frequency, quality, and partner type. Participants (N = 173) ages 20−79 years reported their social interactions at 5 random times throughout the day for 1 week. Results revealed that age was associated with higher frequency of interacting with family and lower frequency of interacting with peripheral partners. These age effects, however, became nonsignificant after accounting for contextual factors such as race, gender, education, employment status, family structure, and living arrangement. In contrast, a curvilinear relationship best characterized age differences in both positive and negative ratings of daily social interaction quality, with middle-aged adults reporting the lowest positive ratings and older adults reporting the lowest negative ratings among all ages. Contextual factors did not account for these patterns of age differences in interaction quality. Furthermore, the intraindividual variability of interaction frequency with peripheral partners, partner diversity, and interaction quality (positivity and negativity) was lower among older adults than among younger adults. Findings from the present study portray a nuanced picture of social interactions in daily life and advance the understanding of social interactions across the life span.


Journal of Social and Personal Relationships | 2018

Couples’ day-to-day pain concordance and marital interaction quality:

Stephanie J. Wilson; Lynn M. Martire; Ruixue Zhaoyang

Chronic pain is a common stressor in couples’ daily lives, but little is known about couples’ day-to-day pain concordance (i.e., agreement regarding one partner’s level of pain) and its relevance to both partners’ daily marital interaction quality. Using 22-day diaries of patients diagnosed with knee osteoarthritis (OA) and their spouses, the current study sought to quantify the degree of daily fluctuation in both partners’ reports of patient pain, pain concordance, and marital interaction quality as well as assess the links between daily concordance and marital tension and enjoyment. Half of the variability in patient–spouse pain concordance and marital interaction quality was attributable to daily fluctuations in these experiences. Furthermore, after accounting for global marital satisfaction, on days when spouses overestimated pain, patients enjoyed marital interactions more, whereas spouses themselves experienced greater tension. Findings underscore the importance of examining pain concordance at the daily level, pain agreement’s significance for everyday marital function, and the potential challenge chronic illness poses for partners in daily life.


Journal of Family Psychology | 2018

Disclosure and holding back: Communication, psychological adjustment, and marital satisfaction among couples coping With osteoarthritis

Ruixue Zhaoyang; Lynn M. Martire; Ashley M. Stanford

This study examined two types of illness-related communication (disclosure and holding back) and their associations with psychological adjustment and marital satisfaction in patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA) and their spouses. A sample of 142 couples reported on disclosure and holding back of OA-related concerns, marital satisfaction, and depressive symptoms at two time points across 1 year. Results from dyadic analyses indicated that holding back was associated with decreases in one’s own marital satisfaction for patients and spouses and increases in one’s own depressive symptoms for spouses over 1 year. In addition, increases in disclosure were associated with increases in marital satisfaction for patients and spouses over time. Holding back and disclosure did not have significant interpersonal effects on the partner’s psychological adjustment or marital satisfaction. These results provide support for the hypothesized intrapersonal effects of disclosure and holding back on marital satisfaction and psychological adjustment over time for both OA patients and their spouses, and highlight the importance of open communication for dyadic coping among couples dealing with chronic illness.


Journal of Personality | 2008

Predicting marital satisfaction from self, partner, and couple characteristics: is it me, you, or us?

Shanhong Luo; Hao Chen; Guoan Yue; Guangjian Zhang; Ruixue Zhaoyang; Dan Xu


Journal of Genetic Counseling | 2016

Genetic Knowledge Among Participants in the Coriell Personalized Medicine Collaborative.

Tara J. Schmidlen; Laura B. Scheinfeldt; Ruixue Zhaoyang; Rachel Kasper; Kevin Sweet; Erynn S. Gordon; Margaret A. Keller; Cathy Stack; Neda Gharani; Mary B. Daly; Joseph P. Jarvis; Michael F. Christman


Personal Relationships | 2009

Do birds of a feather flock together in China

Hao Chen; Shanhong Luo; Guoan Yue; Dan Xu; Ruixue Zhaoyang

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Lynn M. Martire

Pennsylvania State University

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Ashley M. Stanford

Pennsylvania State University

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Erynn S. Gordon

Coriell Institute For Medical Research

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Joseph P. Jarvis

Coriell Institute For Medical Research

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Martin J. Sliwinski

Pennsylvania State University

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Michael F. Christman

Coriell Institute For Medical Research

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Neda Gharani

Coriell Institute For Medical Research

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Orfeu M. Buxton

Pennsylvania State University

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