Authors
Mariko L Visserman, Emily A Impett, Francesca Righetti, Amy Muise, Dacher Keltner, Paul AM Van Lange
Publication date
2019/4
Journal
Social Psychological and Personality Science
Volume
10
Issue
3
Pages
317-325
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
Although gratitude plays a central role in the quality of relationships, little is known about how gratitude emerges, such as in response to partners’ sacrifices. Do people need to accurately see these acts to feel grateful? In two daily experience studies of romantic couples (total N = 426), we used a quasi-signal detection paradigm to examine the prevalence and consequences of (in)accurately “seeing” and missing partners’ sacrifices. Findings consistently showed that sacrifices are equally likely to be missed as they are to be accurately detected, and about half of the time people “see” a sacrifice when the partner declares none. Importantly, “seeing” partners’ sacrifices—accurately or inaccurately—is crucial for boosting gratitude. In contrast, missed sacrifices fail to elicit gratitude, and the lack of appreciation negatively colors the partner’s satisfaction with the relationship when having sacrificed. Thus, these findings …
Total citations
201820192020202120222023202414168782
Scholar articles
ML Visserman, EA Impett, F Righetti, A Muise… - Social Psychological and Personality Science, 2019