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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2013 Dec 4.
Published in final edited form as: Sex Roles. 2012 Feb 1;66(3-4):10.1007/s11199-012-0117-7. doi: 10.1007/s11199-012-0117-7

Table 1.

Descriptive information for all variables measured for husbands and wives

1 2 3 4 5 6 Husband M (SD) Range
1. Marital Quality .47*** −.14*** −.12** .05 .02 .02 4.18(.42)a 1–5
2. Gender Role Attitudes −.01 .09* .22*** .10** −.06 −.25*** 1.81(.53)a 1–4.6
3. Division of Household Labor −.04 .13*** 1 .08* .07 −.08* 1.37(.42)a .38–4
4. Age −.03 .16*** .09* .83*** .07 −.09* 35.64(10.61)a 20–79
5. Income .04 −.17*** −.11** .17*** .34*** .33*** 7.63(2.84)a 1–14
6. Education .03 −.23*** −.13*** −.07* .51*** .36*** 4.17(1.64)a 1–10
7. Wife M (SD) 4.13(.47)b 1.67(.50)b 1.37(.56)b 33.16(9.56)b 6.2(2.85)b 4.95(1.80)b
8. Wife Range 1–5 1–4.6 .38–4 20–79 1–14 1–10

Husbands’ correlations are above the diagonal, wives’ correlations are below the diagonal, and correlations between spouses are on the diagonal. Gender Role Attitudes and Division of Household Labor are coded such that higher scores indicate more traditionality. All other constructs are coded such that higher scores indicate more of that construct

p<.10,

*

p<.05,

**

p<.01,

***

p<.001

a,b

Means with different subscripts are significantly different for husbands’ and wives’, p <.05