Fereshteh Pourmohseni Koluri; Hanieh Ranjbar
Abstract
Marital status is a general assessment of the quality of a marital relationship, i.e., a person's current romantic (satisfaction) or non-romantic (unsatisfactory) relationship, and couples' aggression towards each other is one of the negative behaviors that play a role in marital dissatisfaction. The ...
Read More
Marital status is a general assessment of the quality of a marital relationship, i.e., a person's current romantic (satisfaction) or non-romantic (unsatisfactory) relationship, and couples' aggression towards each other is one of the negative behaviors that play a role in marital dissatisfaction. The purpose of this study was the role of sensitivity to victimization, hostile attribute, ion and anger rumination in predicting marital status. This research was a descriptive correlational study. The population included people aged 20 to 50 years living in Ardabil city; 150 samples were selected and studied by convenience sampling method and completed the Justice Sensitivity Inventory (JSA, victim sensitivity sub-scale), Hostile Attributional Bias Questionnaire (SIP-HBQ), Anger Rumination Scale (ARS) and Golomboc-Rast Marital Status Questionnaire (GRIMS). Pearson correlation analysis and multivariate regression were used to analyze the data. The Pearson correlation test results showed a positive and significant relationship between sensitivity to victimization, hostile attribution bias, and anger rumination with marital problems (P <0.001). Also, regression analysis results showed that the sensitivity to victimization, hostile attribution bias and anger rumination significantly predict marital problems. Sensitivity to victimization, hostile attribution and anger rumination as cognitive factors influencing the occurrence of aggressive behavior in the framework of social information processing theory are discussed. The role of these variables in the occurrence of marital problems was investigated.