Recent advancements in Natural Language Processing (NLP) have highlighted the potential of sentence embeddings in measuring semantic similarity. Yet, its application in analyzing real-world dyadic interactions and predicting the affect of conversational participants remains largely uncharted. To bridge this gap, the present study utilizes verbal conversations within 50 married couples talking about conflicts and pleasant activities. Transformer-based model all-MiniLM-L6-v2 was employed to obtain the embeddings of the utterances from each speaker. The overall similarity of the conversation was then quantified by the average cosine similarity between the embeddings of adjacent utterances. Results showed that semantic similarity had a positive association with wives' affect during conflict (but not pleasant) conversations. Moreover, this association was not observed with husbands' affect regardless of conversation types. Two validation checks further provided support for the validity of the similarity measure and showed that the observed patterns were not mere artifacts of data. The present study underscores the potency of sentence embeddings in understanding the association between interpersonal dynamics and individual affect, paving the way for innovative applications in affective and relationship sciences.
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