Discriminative Facility in Perceptions of Control and Its Relation to Psychological Distress |
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Authors: | Pagona Roussi |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology , Aristotle University of Thessaloniki , Thessaloniki, 54006, Greece |
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Abstract: | This study explored the relationship between discriminative facility and distress. Individuals high in discriminative facility were characterized by high perceptions of primary control and high use of problem- relative to emotion-focused coping with controllable stressors and by low perceptions of primary control, high perceptions of compensatory control, and low use of problem- to emotion-focused coping with uncontrollable stressors. Participants provided information regarding their perceptions of control (control over outcome and control over one's feelings), how they coped, and their level of stressor-specific distress with three stressors, which varied in degree of controllability. They also provided information regarding their level of general distress. Problem-focused coping was found to be adaptive with the two most controllable stressors, but more so when perceptions of primary control were high. Control over one's feelings was helpful with all three stressors, but more so for individuals who had low perceptions of primary control. Finally, individuals high in discriminative facility were found to experience less distress than individuals low in discriminative facility. |
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Keywords: | Discriminative Facility Flexibility In Coping Perceptions Of Control Coping |
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