When and for Whom Implicit Partner Evaluations Predict Forgiveness
Author(s) -
Ruddy Faure,
Francesca Righetti,
Grace Larson,
Maria Fernanda Cuellar,
Antonis Koutsoumpis,
Maria V. Zwicker,
Wilhelm Hofmann
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
social psychological and personality science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.276
H-Index - 58
eISSN - 1948-5514
pISSN - 1948-5506
DOI - 10.1177/1948550620936476
Subject(s) - forgiveness , psychology , trait , social psychology , implicit attitude , affect (linguistics) , control (management) , management , communication , computer science , economics , programming language
Recent work suggests that implicit partner evaluations have long-term implications for relationship success. However, little evidence shows whether and under which conditions implicit partner evaluations affect relationship maintenance processes in daily life, especially those exhibited in situations that may be highly decisive for the fate of the relationship, such as when partners hurt each other. Drawing upon dual-process theories, we predicted that, when executive control is limited—either as a trait or a state—people’s implicit partner evaluations influence forgiveness toward their partner. Results revealed that when temporarily impairing people’s executive control with an experimental manipulation (Study 1), or for people with lower trait executive control (Study 2), more positive implicit partner evaluations were associated with more forgiveness, both in laboratory settings and in an 8-day diary. These findings highlight the importance of implicit partner evaluations under specific, yet common, conditions for promoting reparatory responses that are key to relationship success.
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