INTIMATe RELATIOnships Big Assignment
INTIMATe RELATIOnships Big Assignment
INTIMATe RELATIOnships Big Assignment
“Men and
women come from different worlds!” In the face of research, how true is this though? Several
studies have been carried out to compare the behaviours and attitudes of men and women, the
results show that men and women are more similar than not (Miller, p22, 2012).
Media articles sometimes fail to capture the depth of research findings, exaggerate the findings,
over generalize or hyper focus on the intended area while research articles aim to test and
discover media articles aim to tell a story, in this paper I will be comparing an article about
intimate relationships and one of its cited research articles to evaluate whether it appropriately
Citing multiple research papers, the media article titled healthy high quality relationships matter
more than we think, goes over the importance of relationships- especially their quality, in
affecting our wellbeing. In respect to my chosen research article, social relations and life
satisfaction: the role of friends, the media article describes how the study found a link between
friendship individual satisfaction with life, it specified that the reason for this link was a result of
the quality of the relationship. The article also included the manner in which quality was
measured in the study; by the individual’s satisfaction with the relationship, intensity and
The study itself is based on social capital, which can simply be defined as an individuals social
pool. It is a resource that the authors and many others are interested in observing its role in
peoples lives. With the use of multipurpose surveys that measured life satisfaction, the design
was a cross sectional study. There were questions that accounted for the frequency of interaction
with friends and their satisfaction levels within the past 12 months. The study also had control
variables, social integration and active lifestyle.
The results show that although gender had no effect on life satisfaction, older people tend to be
happier than younger people, education is also a significant factor, people with medium
education are more happy than people with higher education, people’s economic statuses also
had an effect, it seems people with jobs they enjoyed that also allowed them to have sufficient
economic resources tend to be happier than other people. The results also indicated that people
who live in couples were more satisfied with life than people living individually or in any other
living structure. The control measures (social integration and active lifestyle) had very
notable effects on total satisfaction. The more integrated a person is the more satisfied in life
they are, even participation in religious activities and at least moderate exercise, respectively,
have a noticeable effect on overall life satisfaction. Not surprisingly poorer health or limitations
resulted in lower life satisfaction. Personality traits seemed to also influence life satisfaction,
people who were more trusting and those with more positive attitudes were more likely to have
higher life satisfaction than those who do not these traits. Interestingly, those who live in the
north-west were more likely to be more satisfied with their life. Friendship relationships, the
The author’s interpreted the results to mean that having good quality friendships and meeting up
with friends are necessary and most indicative for overall life satisfaction.
Compared to the original research paper, the media paper represented the research in a
watered down manner. The article reduced the findings in the research paper to being about
mainly the quality of friendship and the effect that it has on life satisfaction, it also reduced the
measures used in the study, to centre only those that measured individual satisfaction within
friendship relationships as well as the frequency of interactions with friends. Which is a
significant cut from the scales evaluated during the study. However, since the researchers also
prioritized the link between friendship and life satisfaction, this cut from the article does not
The article failed to include the studies result for the effects of living situations, job satisfaction,
economic resources, health issues, limitations, religious involvement, exercise, personality traits,
level of education, gender, and municipality (Amati et al, 2018). This makes sense given that the
article uses multiple articles to formulate their point on the importance of high quality
relationships. The article does cover one of the features the research paper did, specifically, the
The article focused on people having good relationships with their lovers, friends, and colleagues
the case of an illness, stress relief, and overall happiness, whereas the research article measured
for other factors separate from friendship, that could result in life satisfaction.
The article did go further to suggest ways in which people could better their relationships
Though the article failed to include the other variables, the use of other research papers gave it
more information about the premise of the article, enough to make the article a credible source
for information.
Given the fact that relationship research is young (Miller, 2012, p.42), it is no surprise that there
are hearsays and stereotypes surrounding relationships of all kinds and its effect on us as
humans. This particular case shows how the use of multiple research papers can increase the
integrity of a media article, when separated and looked at in sections, the media article fails to
capture the essence and purpose of the research papers used but when read in its whole context,
the media article, though reducing the study, reliably conveys its intended message.
The use of research papers is an especially important criteria for a media article to be considered
reliable and I now question the reliability of media articles that fail to appropriately cite or fail to
Amati V., Meggiolaro S., Rivellini G., and Zaccarin S. (2018). Social relations and life satisfaction: the role of
friends. Genus, 74(7), https://doi.org/10.1186/s41118-018-0032-z.
Edelmann B. (2022). Healthy, high quality relationships matter more than we think. Discover.
https://www.discovermagazine.com/health/healthy-high-quality-relationships-matter-more-than-we-think
Miller S.R. (2012). Intimate relationships seventh edition. McGraw hill. ISBN 978-0-07-786180-3.