Figures
1.1Components of emotion processes during dyadic interaction
1.2Partners’ intrapersonal emotional experience (i.e., cognition, emotion, and physiology), and its communication
1.3Partners’ interpersonal emotion dynamics during a dyadic interaction process
2.1Graphical representation of the four key characteristics of interpersonal emotion dynamics
3.1Time series of husband and wife heart rates every second during a ten-minute argument within a laboratory
3.2Scatterplots of discrete change in heart rates (HR) on the Y-axis and current value on the X-axis. Wife HR is the upper panel, husband HR is the lower panel
3.3KDP of husband and wife HR. The topographical lines indicate higher frequencies of data occurring at those coordinates which show where the data collected over time
3.5Observed vector plot and kernel density overlaid for just the dense regions of the data of low wife and low husband HR (a) and midwife and low husband HR (b). All changes were divided by five to better visualize the arrows
3.6Inferred vector plot generated from testing the equations on the data
3.7Lowess-based vector plot shaded on the number of dimensions of change would be different from zero
4.1State space grids of a mother–daughter dyad in two different emotion contexts: a discussion about times they felt happy and/or excited toward each other (a), and a discussion about times they felt worried and/or sad toward each other (b)
7.1Associations among family emotion dynamics, daily stressors, and individual and family outcomes