Abstract
Perceiving one’s partner as supportive is considered essential for relationships, but we know little about which factors are central to predicting perceived partner support. Traditional statistical techniques are ill-equipped to compare a large number of potential predictor variables and cannot answer this question. This research used machine learning analysis (random forest with Shapley values) to identify the most salient self-report predictors of perceived partner support cross-sectionally and 6 months later. We analyzed data from five dyadic data sets (N = 550 couples) enabling us to have greater confidence in the findings and ensure generalizability. Our novel results advance the literature by showing that relationship variables and attachment avoidance are central to perceived partner support, whereas partner similarity, other individual differences, individual well-being, and demographics explain little variance in perceiving partners as supportive. The findings are crucial in constraining and further developing our theories on perceived partner support.
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Vowels, L. M., Vowels, M. J., Carnelley, K. B., & Kumashiro, M. (2023). A Machine Learning Approach to Predicting Perceived Partner Support From Relational and Individual Variables. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 14(5), 526–538. https://doi.org/10.1177/19485506221114982
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