Structure, Content and Inter-relationships between Self-aspects: Integrating Findings from the Social Identity and Self Complexity Traditions
Date
Authors
Smyth, Lillian
Banas, Kasia
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons Inc
Abstract
The “social cure” literature from the social identity approach, and the self-complexity literature are both concerned with the structure and content of the self, and their relationship to wellbeing. Our work seeks to integrate these two approaches by investigating the exact characteristics of the self-concept that are associated with wellbeing, focusing in particular on self-aspects that are supportive, positive, representative and compatible (“superaspects”). In a pre-registered correlational study (n = 640) we found that the number of collective superaspects was positively associated with affect balance and quality of life (H1a), but the number of non-collective superaspects was positively associated only with affect balance (H1b). We found no evidence that similarity between self-aspects was negatively associated with wellbeing (H2), or that a self-reported measure of positivity was more strongly associated with wellbeing than a calculated measure (H3). These findings suggest potential avenues for an integrated measurement of the self-concept and its association with wellbeing.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Banas K, Smyth L. Structure, Content and Inter-relationships between Self-aspects: Integrating Findings from the Social Identity and Self Complexity Traditions. Eur J Soc Psychol. 2021;555155:1096– 1112. h t t p s : //d o i .org/10.1002/ejsp.2760
Collections
Source
European Journal of Social Psychology
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
Creative Commons Attribution License