Measuring Dyadic Adjustment: New Scales for Assessing the Quality of Marriage and Similar Dyads

1976 Journal of Marriage and the Family 7,008 citations

Abstract

This study reports on the development of the Dyadic Adjustment Scale, a new measure for assessing the quality of marriage and other similar dyads. The 32-item scale is designed for use with either married or unmarried cohabiting couples. Despite widespread criticisms of the concept of adjustment, the study proceeds from the pragmatic position that a new measure, which is theoretically grounded, relevant, valid, and highly reliable, is necessary since marital and dyadic adjustment continue to be researched. This factor analytic study tests a conceptual definition set forth in eariler work and suggests the existence of four empirically verified components of dyadic adjustment which can be used as subscales [dyadic satisfaction, dyadic cohesion, dyadic consensus and affectional expression]. Evidence is presented suggesting content, criterion-related, and construct validity. High scale reliability is reported. The possibility of item weighting is considered and endorsed as a potential measurement technique, but it not adopted for the present Dyadic Adjustment Scale. It is concluded that the Dyadic Adjustment Scale represents a significant improvement over other measures of marital adjustment, but a number of troublesome methodological issues remain for future research.

Keywords

PsychologyScale (ratio)WeightingSocial psychologyQuality (philosophy)Set (abstract data type)Construct validityReliability (semiconductor)Cohesion (chemistry)Construct (python library)Developmental psychologyPsychometricsComputer science

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Publication Info

Year
1976
Type
article
Volume
38
Issue
1
Pages
15-15
Citations
7008
Access
Closed

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Graham B. Spanier (1976). Measuring Dyadic Adjustment: New Scales for Assessing the Quality of Marriage and Similar Dyads. Journal of Marriage and the Family , 38 (1) , 15-15. https://doi.org/10.2307/350547

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DOI
10.2307/350547