Authors
Eranda Jayawickreme, Frank J Infurna, Kinan Alajak, Laura ER Blackie, William J Chopik, Joanne M Chung, Anna Dorfman, William Fleeson, Marie JC Forgeard, Patricia Frazier, R Michael Furr, Igor Grossmann, Aaron S Heller, Odilia M Laceulle, Richard E Lucas, Maike Luhmann, Gloria Luong, Laurien Meijer, Kate C McLean, Crystal L Park, Ann Marie Roepke, Zeina Al Sawaf, Howard Tennen, Rebecca MB White, Renée Zonneveld
Publication date
2021/2
Source
Journal of personality
Volume
89
Issue
1
Pages
145-165
Description
Objective
Post‐traumatic growth typically refers to enduring positive psychological change experienced as a result of adversity, trauma, or highly challenging life circumstances. Critics have challenged insights from much of the prior research on this topic, pinpointing its significant methodological limitations. In response to these critiques, we propose that post‐traumatic growth can be more accurately captured in terms of personality change—an approach that affords a more rigorous examination of the phenomenon.
Method
We outline a set of conceptual and methodological questions and considerations for future work on the topic of post‐traumatic growth.
Results
We provide a series of recommendations for researchers from across the disciplines of clinical/counseling, developmental, health, personality, and social psychology and beyond, who are interested in improving the quality of research examining …
Total citations
202020212022202320242336111352
Scholar articles