ORCID Profile
0000-0001-5782-1422
Current Organisation
Omada Health
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Publisher: Wiley
Date: 24-09-2007
DOI: 10.1111/J.1467-6494.2007.00473.X
Abstract: Interest in intra-in idual variation in trait expression across situations, contexts, and relationships, and the meaning of this variation for personal functioning has grown significantly. In this article we review this literature with an emphasis on (a) appropriate methods for identifying variations in trait expression and (b) the substantive meaning and sources of this variation. Self-determination theory suggests that people will express traits differently as a function of the degree of support for autonomy they experience in any given setting. Accordingly, autonomy support is shown to predict variations in Big Five trait expression and other stable in idual differences such as attachment security and dependency. The discussion focuses on methodological issues in the study of variability and on why autonomy support may play a central role in explaining trait variability and its relation to well-being.
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Date: 03-2006
Abstract: Two studies examined autonomy support within close friendships. The first showed that receiving autonomy support from a friend predicted the recipient’s need satisfaction within the relationship and relationship quality as indexed by emotional reliance, security of attachment, dyadic adjustment, and inclusion of friend in self and that there was significant mutuality of receiving autonomy support and of each other variable. The relations of perceived autonomy support to need satisfaction and relationship quality held for both female-female and male-male pairs across the two studies. The second study replicated and extended the first, showing that receiving autonomy support also predicted psychological health. Furthermore, giving autonomy support to a friend predicted the givers’ experience of relationship quality over and above the effects of receiving autonomy support from the friend. When both receiving and giving autonomy support competed for variance in predicting well-being, giving, rather than receiving, autonomy support was the stronger predictor.
Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Date: 07-2009
Publisher: Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Date: 07-2016
Publisher: American Psychological Association (APA)
Date: 12-2020
DOI: 10.1037/MOT0000172
Location: United States of America
Location: United States of America
No related grants have been discovered for Jennifer La Guardia.