Fig 1.
Relationship satisfaction before and during the pandemic according to cohabitation of participants.
Asterisks show significant effects (****p < .0001); circles indicate arithmetic means.
Fig 2.
Changes in Relationship Assessment Scale (RAS) items and sexual satisfaction among cohabiting and non-cohabiting individuals.
ncohabiting = 1,825; nnon-cohabiting = 1,418.
Fig 3.
Changes in the frequency of different activities in non-cohabiting and cohabiting individuals (0 = no change, < 0 less frequent, > 0 more frequent).
Asterisks show significant effects (****p < .0001); circles indicate arithmetic means.
Table 1.
Two models identifying factors related to perceived changes in relationship satisfaction after the outbreak of the pandemic.
Fig 4.
Moderation of the association between decrease in shared time and change in relationship satisfaction through avoidant and anxious attachment style.
Decrease in shared time is the z-transformed composite contact variable. For purposes of visualization, we trichotomized the sample into high, medium, and low groups of insecure attachment.