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There's more to self-esteem than whether it is high or low: The importance of stability of self-esteem.
519
Citations
35
References
1993
Year
Quality Of LifeSocial IdentityPersonality PsychologyBehavioral SciencesSelf-monitoringStudy 1Social PsychologyInterpersonal RelationshipsSelf-assessmentSelf-conceptSelf-esteemApplied Social PsychologyNegative FeedbackSelf-esteem InstabilitySocial SciencesPsychosocial ResearchPositive PsychologyPsychology
Study 1 examined the extent to which stability and level of self-esteem predicted cognitive and emotional reactions to interpersonal feedback. Among high self-esteem individuals, instability was associated with acceptance and positive emotions following positive feedback but to rejection and defensiveness following negative feedback. Among low self-esteem individuals, instability was unrelated to reactions to positive feedback but was related to less defensiveness and greater acceptance of negative feedback. Study 2 examined the extent to which variability and importance of specific self-evaluations were associated with instability of global self-esteem. Discussion focused on the roles of level and stability of self-esteem in reactions to evaluations and on the nature of self-esteem instability.
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