Authors
Niall Bolger, Anita DeLongis, Ronald C Kessler, Elizabeth A Schilling
Publication date
1989/11
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
Volume
57
Issue
5
Pages
808
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
This article examines the influence of daily stressors on mental health in a community sample. Ss were 166 married couples who completed diaries each day for 6 weeks. In pooled within-person analyses, daily stressors explained up to 20% of the variance in mood. Interpersonal conflicts were by far the most distressing events. Furthermore, when stressors occurred on a series of days, emotional habituation occurred by the second day for almost all events except interpersonal conflicts. Contrary to certain theoretical accounts, multiple stressors on the same day did not exacerbate one another's effects: rather, an emotional plateau occurred. Finally, on days following a stressful event, mood was better than it would have been if the stressor had not happened. These results reveal the complex emotional effects of daily stressors, and in particular, they suggest that future investigations should focus primarily on …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
N Bolger, A DeLongis, RC Kessler, EA Schilling - Journal of personality and social psychology, 1989