That's it for 2024! It's been a pleasure to share our science with you during my (@SarahCEStanton) time as social media editor.
Our posts will return in early January with a new social media editor at the helm. See you then!
Main et al. #OnlineFirst tested concurrent and lagged links between social contexts and emotion regulation strategies, as well as whether these links were bidirectional. https://t.co/JrpQkWNdNx
@fannyanner & Bolaños-Carpio #OnlineFirst examined Black and Latinx women’s digital media sharing practices in romantic relationships amid a growing trend towards the personalization of digital technologies. https://t.co/VAWi6N8NTl
Lee et al. #OnlineFirst examined the links between sibling ambivalence and well-being of older adults, as well as differences in these links by sibling gender composition. https://t.co/1SUFARE538
Muchemwa et al. #OnlineFirst examined the links between information communication technologies ownership and intimate partner violence among women in sub-Saharan Africa. https://t.co/njH8Tb6Slr
Hillman et al. #OnlineFirst assessed the effects of changeability and relational mobility on preferences for responses to social inconsistency in Canadian and Korean samples. https://t.co/xWzOAkdhQF
Corder et al. #OnlineFirst examined the links between emotional closeness and different information and communication technologies (e.g., voice calls, texting, social media sharing) used in adult sibling relationships. https://t.co/y3k0jXzBpV
Buist et al. #OnlineFirst examined the links among sibling relationship quality, emotion regulation problems, and child functioning in families facing parental cancer. https://t.co/dD6xe0mXZI
Maiya et al. #OnlineFirst tested the links between siblings’ support and conflict and prosocial behaviors towards different recipients, also considering family respect values and empathy. https://t.co/7Te3lpSO8g
de Matos Fernandes et al. #OnlineFirst investigated how the personality traits of the Five-Factor Model interact with friendships and preferred collaboration relationships. https://t.co/IeY7aeVTAW
Rodrigues #OnlineFirst examined gender nonconformity stigma and the conditions under which such stigma is more (or less) likely to emerge. https://t.co/FjHPI70kz1
Jöhnk et al. #OnlineFirst investigated how imagining a conflict’s resolution affects the engagement in resolving that conflict in satisfied and unsatisfied romantic relationships. https://t.co/khac1KrrGY
Trub et al. #OnlineFirst examined how the content of text messages changed in response to a short mindfulness-based intervention delivered via a smartphone app. https://t.co/kQd8clkisV
Con Wright & @tahirenesgedik#OnlineFirst examined how contact with a close friend, a parent, a sibling, and other family member – outside of one’s nuclear family – compare in terms of their association with self-rated health. https://t.co/keYPRwifei
Maras et al. #OnlineFirst tested dyadic links between young adults’ problematic alcohol use and digital dating abuse perpetration, with romantic jealousy as a moderator. https://t.co/voMpDrJ6qe
Tan et al. #OnlineFirst tested links among Chinese mothers’ and grandmothers’ self-control, coparenting relationships, and attachment, and differences between mother-child and grandmother-child dyads. https://t.co/G9OCOf6iZd
@R_AmandaCooper et al. #OnlineFirst assessed the social process linking neighborhood social fragmentation with individual psychological distress. https://t.co/Ucc7pC0cpt
Ng et al. #OnlineFirst investigated if emotion dysregulation explained the links between mindfulness and attachment insecurity (attachment anxiety and avoidance) over time in a Chinese sample. https://t.co/ZbTv5bh1Ie