DO OPPOSITES ATTRACT OR DO BIRDS OF A FEATHER FLOCK TOGETHER?
New Research Involving Newlyweds Finds That What Is Important
In Attracting People To One Another May Not Be Important In Making
Couples Happy
WASHINGTON — Do people tend to select romantic partners that are
similar to them or opposite to them? And does spouse similarity lead to
marital happiness? In one of the most comprehensive studies ever
undertaken on these questions, researchers at the University of Iowa
find that people tend to marry those who are similar in attitudes,
religion and values. However, it is similarity in personality that
appears to be more important in having a happy marriage. The findings
appear in the February issue of the Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology, published by the American Psychological
Association (APA).
Psychologist Eva C. Klohnen, Ph.D., and graduate student Shanhong Luo,
M.A., of the University of Iowa looked at assortative mating issues
(mating based on similar or opposite characteristics) among 291
newlyweds who had participated in the Iowa Marital Assessment Project.
The newlyweds had been married less than a year at the time the study
began and had dated each other for an average of three and a half years.
The couples were assessed on a broad range of personality
characteristics, attitudes and relationship quality indicators.
Results show that couples were highly similar on attitudes and
values; however, they had little or no above-chance similarity on
personality-related domains such as attachment, extraversion,
conscientiousness and positive or negative emotions. There is no
evidence that opposites attract. What is most intriguing is that when
the researchers assessed marital quality and happiness, they found that
personality similarity was related to marital satisfaction, but attitude
similarity was not.
“People may be attracted to those who have similar attitudes, values,
and beliefs and even marry them – at least in part – on the basis of
this similarity because attitudes are highly visible and salient
characteristics and they are fundamental to the way people lead their
lives,” explain the authors. Personality-related characteristics, on the
other hand, take much longer to be known and to be accurately perceived
and are not likely to play a more substantial role until later in the
relationship, they add.
“However, once people are in a committed relationship, it is primarily
personality similarity that influences marital happiness because being
in a committed relationship entails regular interaction and requires
extensive coordination in dealing with tasks, issues and problems of
daily living. Whereas personality similarity is likely to facilitate
this process, personality differences may result in more friction and
conflict in daily life,” say the authors. “As far as attitudes are
concerned, people who chose to marry each other should be well aware of
how similar or different they are on these domains because attitudes are
very visible and salient. This suggests that attitudinal and value
differences, when they exist, are part of a conscious decision to stay
together on the basis of other important considerations, according to
Luo and Klohnen.
Given that their research indicates that similarity in attitudes and
values may play a different role in relationship development than does
personality similarity, Luo and Klohnen suggest that future research
should examine how similarity in different domains are related to
relationship outcomes for couples in earlier and later stages of
relationship development.
Article: “Assortative Mating and Marital Quality in
Newlyweds: A Couple-Centered Approach," Shanhong Luo and Eva C. Klohnen,
University of Iowa; Journal of Personality and Social Psychology,
Vol. 88, No. 2. |