Research Symposium

23rd annual Undergraduate Research Symposium, April 6, 2023

Bogdan Lazurenko Poster Session 2: 1:30 pm - 2:30 pm/ Poster #204


Image (3).jpeg

BIO


I immigrated to United States from Ukraine in 2015. My passions include playing rugby, volunteering as an Emergency Medical Responder for FSU Medical Response Unit, and doing research related to psychology. My career goal is to become a physician and specialize in family medicine or ophthalmology.

Loneliness, Commitment, Well-being, and the Role of Shared Time in Close Relationships

Authors: Bogdan Lazurenko, Thomas Ledermann
Student Major: Exercise Physiology
Mentor: Thomas Ledermann
Mentor's Department: Human Development and Family Science
Mentor's College: College of Health & Human Sciences
Co-Presenters: Isabela Alvarado

Abstract


In married heterosexual couples we can expect to see the following trends:
Wives who experience more stress spend less time with their husbands. However, the amount of stress experienced by husbands seems to be less correlated with the amount of time they share with their wives.
Wives who feel more satisfied with their marriage will likely spend more time with their husbands. On the other hand, husband’s satisfaction with the marriage has a lesser correlation with increased shared time.
Spending more time with their spouse can lead to lesser feelings of depression for women. Shared time seems to have the same effect for men, although the correlation is weaker.
In general, wives who experience depression will be less satisfied with their marriage. Husbands expressed a weaker correlation of the same trend.
Surprisingly, husbands who are more satisfied with their marriage tend to experience less anxiety. This also applies to wives, but to a lesser extent.

Screenshot 2023-03-22 232821.png

Keywords: Commitment, Loneliness, Shared Time, Well Being, Relationships