Authors
Kristen C Kling, Carol D Ryff, Marilyn J Essex
Publication date
1997/9
Journal
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
Volume
23
Issue
9
Pages
981-990
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
Theories about the self-concept suggest that different aspects of the self are organized according to importance, or psychological centrality. The ways in which psychological centrality can change and how these changes are associated with psychological well-being were investigated in a sample of aging women who had experienced community relocation. The self-concept was measured before and after the move, with regard to five life domains (health, family, friends, economics, and daily activities). It was hypothesized that well-being is maximized by increasing the psychological centrality of life domains in which one is doing well and by lowering the psychological centrality of life domains in which one is doing poorly. The hypothesized, adaptive psychological centrality shifts emerged in the health and friends domains for select outcome measures. Centrality shifts with different patterns of directionality were …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
KC Kling, CD Ryff, MJ Essex - Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1997