Cognitive and Emotional Reactions to Daily Events: The Effects of Self‐Esteem and Self‐Complexity
- 1 September 1991
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Personality
- Vol. 59 (3) , 473-505
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6494.1991.tb00257.x
Abstract
In this article we examine the effects of self-esteem and self-complexity on cognitive appraisals of daily events and emotional lability. Subjects (n= 67) participated in a 2-week diary study; each day they made five mood ratings, described the most positive and negative events of the day, and rated these two events on six appraisal measures. Neither self-esteem nor self-complexity was related to an extremity measure of mood variability. Both traits were negatively related to measures assessing the frequency of mood change, although the effect of self-complexity dissipated when self-esteem was taken into account. Self-esteem (but not self-complexity) was also related to event appraisals: Subjects with low self-esteem rated their daily events as less positive and as having more impact on their moods. Subjects with high self-esteem made more internal, stable, global attributions for positive events than for negative events, whereas subjects low in self-esteem made similar attributions for both types of events and viewed their negative events as being more personally important than did subjects high in self-esteem. Despite these self-esteem differences in subjects' views of their daily events, naive judges (n= 63) who read the event descriptions and role-played their appraisals of them generally did not distinguish between the events that had been experienced by low self-esteem versus high self-esteem diary subjects.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Affect Grid: A single-item scale of pleasure and arousal.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1989
- The cost of good fortune: When positive life events produce negative health consequences.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1989
- Agreeable fancy or disagreeable truth? Reconciling self-enhancement and self-verification.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1989
- Illusion and well-being: A social psychological perspective on mental health.Psychological Bulletin, 1988
- The impact of daily stress on health and mood: Psychological and social resources as mediators.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1988
- The Dynamic Self-Concept: A Social Psychological PerspectiveAnnual Review of Psychology, 1987
- Attributional versus preattributional variables in self-esteem and depression: A comparison and test of learned helplessness theory.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1986
- Depressive attributional style.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1979
- Self-schemata and processing information about the self.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1977
- Involvement as a derterminant of response to favorable and unfavorable information.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1967