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Daily emotional stress reactivity in emerging adulthood: temporal stability and its predictors
Authors:Maryhope Howland  Stephen Armeli  Richard Feinn
Affiliation:1. Department of Community Medicine and Healthcare, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT, USA;2. Department of Psychology, Fairleigh Dickinson University, Teaneck, NJ, USA;3. Department of Medical Sciences, Quinnipiac University School of Medicine, Hamden, CT, USA
Abstract:Background & Objectives: Emotional reactivity to stress is associated with both mental and physical health and has been assumed to be a stable feature of the person. However, recent evidence suggests that the within-person association between stress and negative affect (i.e., affective stress-reactivity) may increase over time and in times of high stress, at least in older adult populations. The objective of the current study was to examine the across-time stability of stress-reactivity in a younger sample – emerging adulthood – and examine neuroticism, overall stress, social support and life events as potential moderators of stability.

Design & Methods: Undergraduate students (N?=?540, mean age?=?18.76 years) participated in a measurement burst design, completing a 30-day daily diary annually for four years. Moderators were assessed once at every burst, while negative affect and stress were assessed daily via a secure website.

Results & Conclusions: Findings suggest a relatively high degree of rank-order and mean-level stability in stress-reactivity across the four years, and within-person changes in neuroticism and overall stress predicted concurrent shifts in stress-reactivity. Unlike older samples, there was no evidence of an overall linear change in stability over time, though there was significant variability in linear change trajectories.
Keywords:Stress  emotion  emerging adulthood  longitudinal change  stress-reactivity
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