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Journal Article

Citation

Rohrbaugh MICHAELJ, Shoham VARDA, Butler EA, Hasler BP, Berman JS. Fam. Process 2009; 48(1): 55-67.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, Family Process Institute, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1545-5300.2009.01267.x

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Couples in which one or both partners smoked despite one of them having a heart or lung problem discussed a health-related disagreement before and during a period of laboratory smoking. Immediately afterwards, the partners in these 25 couples used independent joysticks to recall their continuous emotional experience during the interaction while watching themselves on video. A couple-level index of affective synchrony, reflecting correlated moment-to-moment change in the two partners' joystick ratings, tended to increase from baseline to smoking for 9 dual-smoker couples but decrease for 16 single-smoker couples. Results suggest that coregulation of shared emotional experience could be a factor in smoking persistence, particularly when both partners in a couple smoke. Relationship-focused interventions addressing this fit between symptom and system may help smokers achieve stable cessation.

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