Self-expansion within sexual minority relationships

Kevin P. McIntyre*, Brent A. Mattingly, Ilana Issula, Sarah C. E. Stanton

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

According to the self-expansion model, people increase their positive self-concept content when they form and maintain romantic relationships, and self-expansion is an important predictor of relationship outcomes. Although thought to be universal, no prior research has examined self-expansion among sexual minority individuals. In the current study, sexual minority (N = 226) and heterosexual (N = 104) participants completed measures of self-expansion and relationship outcomes, and sexual minority participants completed measures of sexual minority stress. Overall, sexual minorities reported similar levels of self-expansion as heterosexuals, and sexual minority status did not moderate the association between self-expansion and relationship satisfaction, investments, or quality of alternatives. However, sexual minority status moderated the association between self-expansion and commitment. For sexual minority participants, self-expansion negatively correlated with sexual minority stressors (i.e., internalized homonegativity, concealment, inauthenticity) and moderated the association between internalized homonegativity and relationship satisfaction and commitment, as well as concealment and relationship satisfaction and commitment, such that the negative association between sexual minority stressors and relationship outcomes was weaker in relationships characterized by high (vs. low) levels of self-expansion.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages14
JournalThe Journal of Social Psychology
Early online date13 Mar 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 13 Mar 2024

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • self-expansion
  • sexual minority relationships
  • sexual minority stress
  • LGBTQ relationships
  • investment model

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