4.5 Article

Happy to Know You: An Examination of Subjective Well-Being and Partner Knowledge

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAPPINESS STUDIES
Volume 23, Issue 4, Pages 1333-1357

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10902-021-00451-9

Keywords

Subjective well-being; Happiness; Partner knowledge; Relationship quality; Mental health

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This study found that familiarity with partners' normative profiles of subjective well-being (SWB) was associated with greater relationship satisfaction, perceived support from partners, positive affect, and life satisfaction, while familiarity with their distinctive (unique) SWB profiles was not related to any relationship or mental health outcomes. Thus, perceiving one's partner to have normative levels of SWB appears to be more important for relationship and mental health benefits than knowledge of partners' unique experiences of SWB.
In this study, we examined an unexplored type of partner knowledge-familiarity with partners' subjective well-being (i.e., SWB familiarity). Using multilevel models, we analyzed data from 101 heterosexual couples to examine how SWB was associated with partner knowledge and to determine whether SWB familiarity was associated with relationship and mental health benefits. We found that higher levels of positive affect and life satisfaction and lower levels of negative affect were associated with greater normative and distinctive accuracy in partner knowledge of attitudes and traits. We also calculated both normative and distinctive indices of SWB familiarity and found that participants' and their partners' familiarity with normative (i.e., average) profiles of SWB were associated with respondents reporting greater relationship satisfaction, perceived support from their partner, positive affect, and life satisfaction, as well as less negative affect. Conversely, distinctive (i.e., unique) SWB familiarity was not related to any relationship or mental health outcomes. Thus, one's perception of their partner as having normative levels of SWB appears to be more important for relationship and mental health outcomes than knowledge of partners' unique experiences of SWB.

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