Research Domains
Key Research Areas
Six domains of relationship science that inform every assessment, score, and projection on the MarryIQ platform.
Attachment Theory
Pioneered by Bowlby and Ainsworth, attachment theory explains how early bonding experiences shape adult relationship patterns. MarryIQ assesses each partner's attachment style — secure, anxious, avoidant, or disorganized — and models how these styles interact to predict closeness, conflict triggers, and emotional availability within the marriage.
Research by Hazan and Shaver extended attachment theory to adult romantic relationships, demonstrating that the same attachment patterns observed in infant-caregiver bonds reliably predict how adults navigate intimacy, trust, and separation anxiety in their partnerships. MarryIQ uses these validated constructs to map the specific attachment dynamics operating within your relationship.
Conflict Resolution Research
Drawing on Gottman Method principles, MarryIQ analyzes how couples handle disagreements. Research shows that it is not the presence of conflict but the pattern of conflict — criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stonewalling versus repair attempts, de-escalation, and emotional validation — that predicts relationship outcomes with remarkable accuracy.
Gottman’s research identified the “Four Horsemen” of relational breakdown with over 90% predictive accuracy in longitudinal studies. MarryIQ assesses each partner’s tendency toward these destructive patterns, as well as their capacity for the repair behaviors that research shows can neutralize conflict escalation and restore emotional connection.
Financial Psychology
Research consistently identifies financial disagreements as one of the strongest predictors of marital distress. MarryIQ evaluates each partner's money attitudes, spending and saving tendencies, debt tolerance, risk preferences, and financial transparency — then models how these financial orientations are likely to interact over time, revealing alignment gaps before they escalate into recurring conflict.
Studies by Dew, Britt, and Huston demonstrate that financial disagreements are qualitatively different from other marital conflicts — they are more intense, more persistent, and more difficult to resolve. MarryIQ’s Financial Alignment Score captures not just how much partners earn or spend, but the underlying money scripts and financial belief systems that drive behavior.
Communication Science
Decades of research on marital communication reveal that specific interaction patterns — such as positive-to-negative sentiment ratios, bids for connection, and turning toward versus turning away behaviors — reliably predict relationship satisfaction and distress. MarryIQ assesses these communication dynamics through structured questions that map how each partner listens, expresses needs, and responds to emotional bids.
The concept of “bids for connection,” identified through observational research, reveals that everyday micro-interactions have an outsized impact on relationship quality. Couples who consistently turn toward each other’s bids maintain stronger bonds over time. MarryIQ evaluates these patterns to identify where communication is thriving and where it needs targeted strengthening.
Stress & Coping Models
External stressors — job loss, health crises, family demands, financial pressure — do not cause relationship failure on their own. Research shows that it is how couples cope together that determines outcomes. MarryIQ models dyadic coping patterns, individual stress thresholds, and support-seeking behaviors to forecast how a couple is likely to respond when life becomes difficult.
Bodenmann’s Systemic Transactional Model demonstrates that stress spillover from external sources is one of the primary mechanisms through which otherwise strong relationships deteriorate. MarryIQ assesses each partner’s stress tolerance, support-seeking style, and capacity for dyadic coping to identify vulnerability points before external pressures expose them.
Longitudinal Marriage Studies
The most powerful insights about marriage come from studies that follow couples over decades, not weeks. MarryIQ integrates findings from major longitudinal research programs that have tracked thousands of couples over 10, 20, and 30+ years to identify the specific factors — behavioral, emotional, financial, and relational — that distinguish marriages that thrive from those that deteriorate over time.
These long-term studies provide something that cross-sectional research cannot: the ability to identify which early relationship patterns reliably predict outcomes years or decades later. MarryIQ leverages these findings to generate trajectory projections that are grounded in real outcome data, not theoretical assumptions.