Folge 8: Persönlichkeit, Beziehung und die Suche nach dem Partner fürs Leben

Wie wirkt sich unsere Persönlichkeit auf unsere Beziehungsqualität aus? Wie prägt unsere Kindheit unser Bindungsverhalten? Und: Wann sollten wir uns am besten auf den Partner fürs Leben festlegen?

Vielen Dank an meine Gesprächspartnerinnen:
Janina Larissa Bühler
Janne Fengler

In dieser Folge habe ich unter anderem diese Quellen benutzt:

Cortes & Wood: Is it really “all in their heads”? How self‐esteem predicts partner responsiveness (Journal of Personality, 2018) 

Ahuvia & Wong: Personality and Values Based Materialism: Their Relationship and Origins (Journal of Consumer Psychology, 2002)

Bestimmte Erziehungsmaßnahmen können Materialismus fördern (Kinderaerzte im Netz)

Bottomley et al.: Measuring childhood materialism: Refining and validating Schor’s Consumer Involvement Scale (Psychology &b Marketing, 2010)

Bühler et al.: Daily Responsiveness, Expectations, and Self-Disclosure: How the Average Levels and Within-Person Variability of Three Relationship Components Mediate Personality-Relationship Transactions in Romantic Couples (European Journal of Personality, 2020)

Del Toro: The Influence of Parent-Child Attachment on Romantic Relationships
(Boise Stae Uni)

Fry: Die Mathematik der Liebe (FISCHER Taschenbuch)

Górnik-Durose: Materialism and Well-Being Revisited: The Impact of Personality. (J Happiness Stud, 2020)

LeBaron et al.: Money Over Marriage: Marriage Importance as a Mediator Between Materialism and Marital Satisfaction (Journal of Family and Economic Issues, 2018)

Optimal Stopping and Applications (UCLA)

Reutskaja et al.: Choice overload reduces neural signatures of choice set value in dorsal striatum and anterior cingulate cortex (Nat Hum Behav, 2018)

Richins & Chaplin: Material Parenting: How the Use of Goods in Parenting Fosters Materialism in the Next Generation (Journal of Consumer Research, 2015)

What Makes Some Kids So Materialistic? (Good Science Center, UC Berkeley)

Williams & Jarvis, B: Cyberball: A program for use in research on interpersonal ostracism and acceptance (Behavior Research Methods, 2006)

Zeigler-Hill & Myers: An Implicit Theory of Self-Esteem: The Consequences of Perceived Self-Esteem for Romantic Desirability (Evolutionary Psychology, 2011)