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Fig 1.

Relationship satisfaction before and during the pandemic according to cohabitation of participants.

Asterisks show significant effects (****p < .0001); circles indicate arithmetic means.

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Fig 1 Expand

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.

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Fig 2 Expand

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.

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Fig 3 Expand

Table 1.

Two models identifying factors related to perceived changes in relationship satisfaction after the outbreak of the pandemic.

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Table 1 Expand

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.

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Fig 4 Expand