The Simple Life: On the Benefits of Low Self Complexity Print E-mail

 

 

Pers Soc Psychol Bull. 2009 Apr 29. [Epub ahead of print]

 

The Simple Life: On the Benefits of Low Self-Complexity.

 

McConnell AR, Strain LM, Brown CM, Rydell RJ. Miami University.

 

 

This article examines the spillover amplification hypothesis, which proposes that because people lower in self-complexity experience stronger responses to life events they will show relatively better well-being in the presence of positive factors (e.g., better social support) and relatively poorer well-being in the presence of negative factors (e.g., a history of negative experiences). Across three studies, support for spillover amplification was found. Specifically, people lower in self-complexity revealed greater self-esteem, less depression, and fewer illnesses when they had greater social support (Study 1) and more desirable personality characteristics (Study 2), yet they had poorer well-being if they had a history of many negative life events (Study 3). Thus, how one's self-concept is represented in memory moderates the relationship between many well-established factors and well-being.

 

PMID: 19403790 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

 

 

 

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