| |
| Gina Bellavia |
| Name: |
Gina Bellavia |
| Email: |
gbellavi@ria.buffalo.edu |
| Primary Address: |
Research Institute on Addictions 1021 Main Street Buffalo,NY 14203 United States |
| Secondary Address: |
|
| Phone: |
7168872916 |
| Fax: |
7168872477 |
| Organization: |
Research Institute on Addictions |
| Researcher Home Page URL: |
http://www.ria.buffalo.edu/profiles/bellavia.htm |
| Organization Home Page URL: |
http://www.ria.buffalo.edu/ |
|
|
Gina Bellavia is a postdoctoral research associate at the State University of New York at Buffalo’s Research Institute on Addictions. Her research interests include romantic relationships, families, work-family conflict, and flexible work policies. Her work has been published in journals such as the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, and Personal Relationships. She and Michael Frone have co-authored a chapter titled "Work-Family Conflict" which will appear in the forthcoming Handbook of Work Stress.
|
- Murray, S. L., Bellavia, G. M., Rose, P., & Griffin, D. W. (2003). Once hurt, twice hurtful: How perceived regard regulates daily marital interactions. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 84, 126-147.
Abstract: A daily diary study examined how chronic perceptions of a partner's regard affect how intimates interpret and respond to daily relationship stresses. Spouses each completed a diary for 21 days. Multilevel analyses reveal...(more)
- Bellavia, G. M., & Murray, S. L. (2003). Did I do that? Self-esteem-related differences in reactions to romantic partners’ moods. Personal Relationships, 10, 77-95.
Abstract: This study examined the relation between self-esteem and responses to a romantic partner's moods. College students in dating relationships imagined one scenario in which their romantic partners were in a positive mood an...(more)
- Murray, S.L., Griffin, D.W., Rose, P., & Bellavia, G.M. (2003). Calibrating the Sociometer: The Relational Contingencies of Self-Esteem. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 85, 63-84.
Abstract: A longitudinal daily diary study examined how chronic perceptions of a partner's regard for oneself might affect the day-to-day relational contingencies of self-esteem. Married partners each completed a diary for 21 days...(more)
|
|