29 research outputs found

    The effects of graduate training on reasoning: Formal discipline and thinking about everyday life events

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/92173/1/TheEffectsOfGraduateTraining.pd

    Maximizing versus satisficing: Happiness is a matter of choice.

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    Resilience to loss and chronic grief: A prospective study from preloss to 18-months postloss

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    The vast majority of bereavement research is conducted after a loss has occurred. Thus, knowledge of the divergent trajectories of grieving or their antecedent predictors is lacking. This study gathered prospective data on 205 individuals several years prior to the death of their spouse and at 6- and 18-months postloss. Five core bereavement patterns were identified: common grief, chronic grief, chronic depression, improvement during bereavement, and resilience. Common grief was relatively infrequent, and the resilient pattern most frequent. The authors tested key hypotheses in the literature pertaining to chronic grief and resilience by identifying the preloss predictors of each pattern. Chronic grief was associated with preloss dependency and resilience with preloss acceptance of death and belief in a just world. The death of a spouse is generally assumed to be one of the most stressful experiences that people encounter during the course of their lives (Holmes & Rahe, 1967). However, there are marked individual differences in how much and for how long people grieve (Bonanno & Kaltman, 1999, 2001; Wortman & Silver, 1989, 2001). In addition to what is assumed to be the typical or common reaction, an initial increase in depression that gradually subsides over time, several other patterns of grief have been discussed in the literature. These include prolonged or chronic grieving, the noticeable absence of grief symptoms, and delayed grief responses. Social and personality psychologists have become increasingly interested in these different trajectories, and how they compare with those observed for other marital transitions and othe

    A Comparison of Spouse and Child Loss from Motor Vehicle Crashes (Bereavement, Coping, Life Events, Stress, Spouse-Child).

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    This study compared the long-term experiences of the loss of a spouse with the loss of a child in order to underst and better each of these two types of bereavement. Interviews were conducted with 40 individuals who lost a spouse in a motor vehicle crash 4-7 years earlier and 54 parents who lost a child in such a crash. Control respondents matched on a case-by-case basis on sex, age, income, education, and number and ages of children were also interviewed and used as a comparison for the present-day functioning measures. Significant differences between bereaved spouses and controls were revealed on several indicators of general functioning, including depression and other psychiatric symptoms, social functioning, psychological well-being, reactivity to good events, and future worries and concerns. Comparisons between bereaved and control parents also revealed significant differences on some measures of general functioning (especially depression), but these were not as pervasive as the differences obtained in the spouse study. Thus, the results indicated that conjugal bereavement may pose more difficulties for subsequent functioning than the loss of a child; however these differences were slight. A number of differences in the grief experiences of bereaved spouses and parents were discovered. Bereaved parents reported less resolution than bereaved spouses on a variety of cognitive and emotional resolution variables, such as present ruminations of the loved one, reviewing the events that led up to the accident, asking "Why me? or Why my loved one?", and continuing to search for meaning. However, in line with the functioning data, bereaved parents, compared to bereaved spouses, felt they were doing better (1) compared to others who had suffered similar losses, and (2) compared to how they thought they would be doing. Other results indicated that bereaved parents were significantly more likely than bereaved spouses to have mentioned help they received from God or religious beliefs, or a belief in a possible afterlife for their children. Bereaved spouses reported more problems with chronic role strains and daily hassles, loneliness, and a lack of life goals.Ph.D.Social psychologyUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/160821/1/8600483.pd

    Counterfactual thinking and ascriptions of cause and preventability.

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    A longitudinal study of the effects of undergraduate education on reasoning

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/92176/1/ALongitudinalStudy.pd
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