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      Taking chances in the face of threat: romantic risk regulation and approach motivation.

      Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin
      Choice Behavior, Conflict (Psychology), Courtship, psychology, Decision Making, Female, Goals, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Judgment, Male, Models, Psychological, Motivation, Rejection (Psychology), Risk-Taking, Self Concept, Social Control, Informal

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          Abstract

          Four studies examine the hypothesis that goals adopted by high and low self-esteem people (HSEs and LSEs) to manage risk in romantic relationships may reflect global shifts in approach motivation and subsequently affect risk taking in nonsocial domains. In Studies 1 and 2, threats to participants' romantic relationships heightened HSEs' self-reported general approach motivation while lowering LSEs' approach motivation. In Studies 2 through 4, HSEs exhibited riskier decision making (i.e., a greater tendency to pursue rewards and ignore risks) in nonsocial domains following a relationship threat manipulation whereas LSEs made more conservative decisions. These results suggest that the romantic risk regulation may be inherently linked to a broader approach and avoidance system and that specific risk regulation behaviors may be driven by global motivational shifts to a greater degree than previously theorized.

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