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Interpersonal forgiving in close relationships

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TLDR
Evidence is found consistent with the hypotheses that the relationship between receiving an apology from and forgiving one's offender is a function of increased empathy for the offender and that forgiving is uniquely related to conciliatory behavior and avoidance behavior toward the offending partner.
Abstract
Forgiving is a motivational transformation that inclines people to inhibit relationship-destructive responses and to behave constructively toward someone who has behaved destructively toward them. The authors describe a model of forgiveness based on the hypothesis that people forgive others to the extent that they experience empathy for them. Two studies investigated the empathy model of forgiveness. In Study 1, the authors developed measures of empathy and forgiveness. The authors found evidence consistent with the hypotheses that (a) the relationship between receiving an apology from and forgiving one's offender is a function of increased empathy for the offender and (b) that forgiving is uniquely related to conciliatory behavior and avoidance behavior toward the offending partner. In Study 2, the authors conducted an intervention in which empathy was manipulated to examine the empathy-forgiving relationship more closely. Results generally supported the conceptualization of forgiving as a motivational phenomenon and the empathy-forgiving link.

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Citations
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The Role of Relationship Norms in Responses to Service Failures

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors found that when consumers focus their attention on the provider's obligation to respond to their needs, they react more negatively to a service failure when they are friends of the provider than when they have only a business relationship with him or her.
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The temporal course of self-forgiveness

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the temporal course of self-forgiveness using 8 waves of data collected from 148 participants, and found that self forgiveness increased linearly over time, and fluctuations in 6 time-varying covariates were related to changes in self forgiving beyond those accounted for by the self forgiving trajectory.
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Transgression Severity and Forgiveness: Different Moderators for Objective and Subjective Severity

TL;DR: This paper examined insider/subjective and outsider/objective perspectives on forgiveness and found that both subjective and objective ratings of event severity predicted forgiveness, and that rejection sensitivity proved consequential in moderating the impact of objective severity whereas responsibility attributions moderated the impact on subjective severity ratings.
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Vengeance is mine: Narcissism, vengeance, and the tendency to forgive

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors tested the hypothesis that what distinguishes unforgiving people who are highly vengeful from unforgiving individuals who are not, is that the latter group is lower in narcissism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hope-Focused and Forgiveness-Based Group Interventions To Promote Marital Enrichment.

TL;DR: Worthington et al. as discussed by the authors reported a clinical trial (N = 43 couples) that compared a hope-focused marital enrichment with empathy-centered forgiveness-based marital enrichment and a wait-list control group.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Development and validation of brief measures of positive and negative affect: The PANAS scales.

TL;DR: Two 10-item mood scales that comprise the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS) are developed and are shown to be highly internally consistent, largely uncorrelated, and stable at appropriate levels over a 2-month time period.
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Comparative fit indexes in structural models

TL;DR: A new coefficient is proposed to summarize the relative reduction in the noncentrality parameters of two nested models and two estimators of the coefficient yield new normed (CFI) and nonnormed (FI) fit indexes.
Book

The psychology of interpersonal relations

TL;DR: The psychology of interpersonal relations as mentioned in this paper, The psychology in interpersonal relations, The Psychology of interpersonal relationships, کتابخانه دیجیتال و فن اطلاعات دانشگاه امام صادق(ع)
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of Event Scale: a measure of subjective stress.

TL;DR: A scale of current subjective distress, related to a specific event, was based on a list of items composed of commonly reported experiences of intrusion and avoidance, and responses indicated that the scale had a useful degree of significance and homogeneity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring Dyadic Adjustment: new scales for assessing the quality of marriage and similar dyads

TL;DR: The Dyadic Adjustment Scale as discussed by the authors is a measure for assessing the quality of marriage and other similar dyads, which is designed for use with either married or unmarried cohabiting couples.
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