Del Giudice, Marco
Published in
Personality & social psychology bulletin
This article presents the first meta-analysis of sex differences in the avoidance and anxiety dimensions of adult romantic attachment, based on 113 samples (N = 66,132) from 100 studies employing two-dimensional romantic attachment questionnaires (Experiences in Close Relationships, Experiences in Close Relationships-Revised, and Adult Attachment Q...
Lee-Flynn, Sharon C Pomaki, Georgia Delongis, Anita Biesanz, Jeremy C Puterman, Eli
Published in
Personality & social psychology bulletin
The current study investigated how self-esteem and self-concept clarity are implicated in the stress process both in the short and long term. Initial and 2-year follow-up interviews were completed by 178 participants from stepfamily unions. In twice-daily structured diaries over 7 days, participants reported their main family stressor, cognitive ap...
Bauer, Isabelle Wrosch, Carsten
Published in
Personality & social psychology bulletin
Two longitudinal studies showed that if adults confront low opportunities to overcome regrets, downward social comparisons can exert self-protective functions across the adult life span, irrespective of age (Study 1 N = 104 young and older adults, Study 2 N = 51 older adults). Both studies found that downward relative to upward social comparisons w...
Murray, Damian R Trudeau, Russell Schaller, Mark
Published in
Personality & social psychology bulletin
What are the origins of cultural differences in conformity? The authors deduce the hypothesis that these cultural differences may reflect historical variability in the prevalence of disease-causing pathogens: Where pathogens were more prevalent, there were likely to emerge cultural norms promoting greater conformity. The authors conducted four test...
Boehnke, Klaus Wong, Becky
Published in
Personality & social psychology bulletin
Utilizing latent growth modeling, the long-term development of worries among peace movement supporters is examined. Data originate from a seven-wave German longitudinal study started in 1985 with on average 14-year-olds. Waves were interspersed 3 and a half years each. Activists are assumed to have lower (self-related) microworries (Hypothesis 1) a...
Shechter, Olga G Durik, Amanda M Miyamoto, Yuri Harackiewicz, Judith M
Published in
Personality & social psychology bulletin
Two studies tested how participants' responses to utility value interventions and subsequent interest in a math technique vary by culture (Westerners vs. East Asians) and levels of initial math interest. Participants in Study 1 were provided with information about the utility value of the technique or not. The manipulation was particularly effectiv...
Bryan, Angela D Webster, Gregory D Mahaffey, Amanda L
Published in
Personality & social psychology bulletin
Dominance is a key feature on which romantic partners are evaluated, yet there is no clear consensus on its definition. In Study 1 (N=305), the authors developed scales to measure three putatively distinct dimensions of dominance: social, financial, and physical. In Study 2 (N=308), the authors used their scales in a mate-selection paradigm and fou...
Lukaszewski, Aaron W Roney, James R
Published in
Personality & social psychology bulletin
The origins of variation in extraversion are largely mysterious. Recent theories and some findings suggest that personality variation can be orchestrated by specific genetic polymorphisms. Few studies, however, have examined an alternative hypothesis that personality traits are facultatively calibrated to variations in other phenotypic features, an...
Hamedani, MarYam G Markus, Hazel Rose Fu, Alyssa S
Published in
Personality & social psychology bulletin
Current public discourse calls for America to act more interdependently in the world or act more like a conjoint agent. America and American selves, however, are typically associated acting independently or disjoint agency. Since nation is a significant sociocultural source of self, the authors examine what happens to American selves if America is ...
Tormala, Zakary L Clarkson, Joshua J Henderson, Marlone D
Published in
Personality & social psychology bulletin
This research investigates the effect of perceived evaluation duration--that is, the perceived time or speed with which one generates an evaluation--on attitude certainty. Integrating diverse findings from past research, the authors propose that perceiving either fast or slow evaluation can augment attitude certainty depending on specifiable factor...