Testing a model of unwanted pursuit and stalking

Unwanted pursuit and stalking are common, especially among young adults attending college. Cupach and Spitzberg (2004) developed their relational goal pursuit theory to explain unwanted pursuit and stalking. They theorize that unwanted pursuit and stalking develop out of a disjunctive relationship i...

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Main Author: Dutton-Greene, Leila B
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: DigitalCommons@URI 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI3145418
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spelling ftunivrhodeislan:oai:digitalcommons.uri.edu:dissertations-1808 2023-05-15T18:27:04+02:00 Testing a model of unwanted pursuit and stalking Dutton-Greene, Leila B 2004-01-01T08:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI3145418 ENG eng DigitalCommons@URI https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI3145418 Dissertations and Master's Theses (Campus Access) Psychology|Experiments|Social psychology|Behaviorial sciences text 2004 ftunivrhodeislan 2021-06-29T19:20:06Z Unwanted pursuit and stalking are common, especially among young adults attending college. Cupach and Spitzberg (2004) developed their relational goal pursuit theory to explain unwanted pursuit and stalking. They theorize that unwanted pursuit and stalking develop out of a disjunctive relationship in which one person wants a type of relationship that the other does not. They propose that the interrelated and co-occurring processes of rumination, emotional flooding, and rationalization serve to disinhibit a pursuer's idea of what is appropriate behavior. I tested a model of unwanted pursuit and stalking based on Cupach and Spitzberg's (2004) theory. I hypothesized that jealousy, possessiveness, anger, shame, and guilt would contribute to rumination and emotional flooding which would, in turn, predict unwanted pursuit and stalking. I first conducted a pilot study of the measures with 503 (320 females, 163 males, 20 sex not reported; M = 18.89 years, SD = 1.55) undergraduates who had difficulty letting go of someone after the breakup of a romantic relationship. For the final study, participants included 288 (227 females, 60 males, 1 sex not reported; M = 18.78 years, SD = 2.68) undergraduates who had difficulty letting go of a former partner. For both studies, students completed an anonymous online questionnaire which included measures of jealousy, possessiveness, anger, shame, guilt, rumination, emotional flooding, unwanted pursuit and stalking, and social desirability. The results did not support the hypothesized model. Exploratory analysis revealed, instead, that possessiveness, anger, and rumination predict jealousy which, in turn, predicts mild pursuit. The results also indicated that possessiveness, anger, and rumination contribute directly to mild pursuit. The results provide a profile of a person who is likely to engage in mild pursuit after a relationship breakup. This person was possessive while the relationship is intact, angry after the breakup, and engages in rumination after relationship termination. Further, those who experience possessiveness, anger, and rumination are also more likely to feel jealous after a breakup and this contributes to the likelihood that she or he will pursue a former partner. These results have important implications for theory development as well as prevention and intervention efforts Text Spitzberg University of Rhode Island: DigitalCommons@URI
institution Open Polar
collection University of Rhode Island: DigitalCommons@URI
op_collection_id ftunivrhodeislan
language English
topic Psychology|Experiments|Social psychology|Behaviorial sciences
spellingShingle Psychology|Experiments|Social psychology|Behaviorial sciences
Dutton-Greene, Leila B
Testing a model of unwanted pursuit and stalking
topic_facet Psychology|Experiments|Social psychology|Behaviorial sciences
description Unwanted pursuit and stalking are common, especially among young adults attending college. Cupach and Spitzberg (2004) developed their relational goal pursuit theory to explain unwanted pursuit and stalking. They theorize that unwanted pursuit and stalking develop out of a disjunctive relationship in which one person wants a type of relationship that the other does not. They propose that the interrelated and co-occurring processes of rumination, emotional flooding, and rationalization serve to disinhibit a pursuer's idea of what is appropriate behavior. I tested a model of unwanted pursuit and stalking based on Cupach and Spitzberg's (2004) theory. I hypothesized that jealousy, possessiveness, anger, shame, and guilt would contribute to rumination and emotional flooding which would, in turn, predict unwanted pursuit and stalking. I first conducted a pilot study of the measures with 503 (320 females, 163 males, 20 sex not reported; M = 18.89 years, SD = 1.55) undergraduates who had difficulty letting go of someone after the breakup of a romantic relationship. For the final study, participants included 288 (227 females, 60 males, 1 sex not reported; M = 18.78 years, SD = 2.68) undergraduates who had difficulty letting go of a former partner. For both studies, students completed an anonymous online questionnaire which included measures of jealousy, possessiveness, anger, shame, guilt, rumination, emotional flooding, unwanted pursuit and stalking, and social desirability. The results did not support the hypothesized model. Exploratory analysis revealed, instead, that possessiveness, anger, and rumination predict jealousy which, in turn, predicts mild pursuit. The results also indicated that possessiveness, anger, and rumination contribute directly to mild pursuit. The results provide a profile of a person who is likely to engage in mild pursuit after a relationship breakup. This person was possessive while the relationship is intact, angry after the breakup, and engages in rumination after relationship termination. Further, those who experience possessiveness, anger, and rumination are also more likely to feel jealous after a breakup and this contributes to the likelihood that she or he will pursue a former partner. These results have important implications for theory development as well as prevention and intervention efforts
format Text
author Dutton-Greene, Leila B
author_facet Dutton-Greene, Leila B
author_sort Dutton-Greene, Leila B
title Testing a model of unwanted pursuit and stalking
title_short Testing a model of unwanted pursuit and stalking
title_full Testing a model of unwanted pursuit and stalking
title_fullStr Testing a model of unwanted pursuit and stalking
title_full_unstemmed Testing a model of unwanted pursuit and stalking
title_sort testing a model of unwanted pursuit and stalking
publisher DigitalCommons@URI
publishDate 2004
url https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI3145418
genre Spitzberg
genre_facet Spitzberg
op_source Dissertations and Master's Theses (Campus Access)
op_relation https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI3145418
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