78 research outputs found
What You Want (and Do Not Want) Affects What You See (and Do Not See): Avoidance Social Goals and Social Events
Barreiras e desafios para melhoria da integração interfuncional entre Desenvolvimento de Produto e Planejamento e Controle da Produção em ambiente Engineering-to-Order
Getting started in hedge funds: from launching a hedge fund to new regulation, the use of leverage, and top manager profiles
Attachment and daily sexual goals: A study of dating couples
Abstract This research provides the first empirical investigation of how both partners' attachment orientations contribute to daily sexual goals. Both members of 84 dating couples who attended a large urban university on the West Coast in the United States completed a measure of attachment orientation, and 1 member completed a measure of sexual goals for 14 consecutive days. Analyses showed that attachment anxiety was associated with engaging in sex to please one's partner and express love, whereas attachment avoidance was associated with engaging in sex to avoid negative relational consequences and was negatively associated with engaging in sex to express love. Daily sexual goals were also associated with the partner's attachment orientation. Gender moderated many of these associations. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed
Including a brief substance-abuse motivational intervention in a couples treatment program for intimate partner violence
Substance abuse (SA) and intimate partner violence (IPV) frequently co-occur providing challenges to researchers and treatment professionals alike. Researchers have struggled to understand the nature of the relationship between these two difficult issues. Are they wholly un-related, indirectly related, or is there a causal relationship between the two? Treatment professionals face the dilemma of how to provide treatment to clients who abuse substances and who are violent with heir intimate others. Most treatment for these two disorders is provided separately with varying degrees of effort to coordinate them. Models of combined treatment are few, and none address couples in which both partners are violent and/or abuse substances. In this paper, we briefly review the literature on SA and IPV and then describe a brief substance abuse awareness intervention, based on Motivational Interviewing, that we have integrated into our conjoint couples treatment model for IPV
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