HomeAbout UsDr. John GottmanWhat Predicts Divorce?
What Predicts Divorce?
 
Buy Now!
  FormatPriceQuantity
 Book - Paperback$65.00

What Predicts Divorce?

Average rating for this product: unrated

By Dr. John Gottman

In this initial study, designed to provide an empirical foundation for understanding what makes marriages work and what factors underlie divorce, John Gottman identified both the basic skills associated with satisfying marriages and the skill deficits that typically accompany unhappy unions. This volume covers many of Dr. Gottman's major findings and the methodology behind them: that happy couples know how to resolve their disagreements while unhappy couples do not; that all couples, happy and unhappy, have conflict; and that the ratio of positive to negative interactions during arguments is a critical factor.  His research shows that a rich climate of positivity ("positive sentiment override") exists in a stable marriage, whereas in an unstable relationship this is lacking; and that satisfied couples know how to negotiate a resolution while dissatisfied couples do not.

Family and clinical psychologists and methodologists will appreciate Dr. Gottman's credentials in mathematics, physics, and psychology as he details the rigorous experimental techniques applied during this nine year study of marital relationships.

Write a Review

"... a rich, in-depth volume that thoroughly explains his creative work....Every chapter is ripe with insight, solidly based empirical data, sound theory development, and suggestions for application....this volume is a major contribution to the understanding of marriage and marital dissolution processes." ~ Journal of Marriage and the Family

"There is a wealth of valuable detail in this book....Gottman has provided an abundance of ideas that may stimulate thought by both researchers and therapists....Marital therapists, guided by the findings, can be more alert to the trajectories their client couples are following and possibly teach some of their clients more effective communication skills that may deflect them from the path of dissolution..." ~ The American Journal of Family Therapy