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Self-perceptions of reactions to doing well or poorly: The roles of stability and level of self-esteem
Authors:Michael H. Kernis  Keegan D. Greenier  Caryn E. Herlocker  Connie R. Whisenhunt  Teresa A. Abend
Affiliation:Psychology Department, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30607-3013, U.S.A.
Abstract:We examined how individual differences in stability and level of self-esteem relate to self-perceptions of reactions to evaluative events. After exposure to either positive or negative mood-inducing stimuli, participants indicated the likelihood that they would react in reasonable, defensive/aggrandizing, and self-deprecating ways to doing well or poorly at something. Compared to stable high self-esteem individuals (stable high SEs), unstable high SEs reported a greater likelihood of reactions that appear to reflect fragile feelings of self-worth (e.g. more defensive/aggrandizing reactions). Fewer differences as a function of stability of self-esteem emerged among low SEs. Mood interacted with the self-esteem variables in the prediction of several reaction categories. These findings lend support for a multifaceted conceptualization of self-esteem and its role in psychological functioning.
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