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Correlational Study

| Published: June 29, 2025

Family Relationship and Life Orientation Among Young Adults

DIP: 18.01.399.20251302

DOI: 10.25215/1302.399

ABSTRACT

This study investigated the association between family relationship variables (cohesion, expressiveness, and conflict) and life orientation (optimism) in 170 Indian young adults (85 males, 85 females) aged 18-25.  The Brief Family Relationship Scale and the Revised Life Orientation Test were used for data collection. Results revealed that 75.9% of individuals reported strong family cohesiveness, 61.2% high expressiveness, and 63.5% moderate conflict.  More than half (57.1%) showed low optimism, with only 1.2% reporting high optimism.  Pearson’s correlation revealed that stronger family cohesiveness (r = -0.35) and expressiveness (r = -0.25) were substantially related with higher optimism, whereas increased conflict (r = 0.30) was associated with lower optimism.  T-tests found no significant gender differences in cohesiveness, expressiveness, or optimism. However, males reported considerably higher levels of family conflict than females (p < 0.05). These findings emphasize the relevance of supportive family situations in generating optimism among young people, as well as the utility of employing t-tests and Pearson correlation to analyze such interactions in psychological research.

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Responding Author Information

Hetokali N. Awomi @ hetokalinawomi11@gmail.com

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Article Overview

ISSN 2348-5396

ISSN 2349-3429

18.01.399.20251302

10.25215/1302.399

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Published in   Volume 13, Issue 2, April-June, 2025