55 research outputs found

    Financial scarcity undermines health across the globe and the life course.

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    The gradient between income and health is well established: the lower the income, the poorer the health. However, low income (having few economic resources) may not be enough to characterize economic vulnerability, and financial scarcity (perceiving having insufficient economic resources) may further reduce health. First, analysis of cross-national data (275,000+ participants from 200+ country-years) revealed that financial scarcity was associated with twice the odds of suffering from reduced self-rated health and feelings of unhappiness; this association was observed in ≈90% of the country-years and explained variance over and above income. Second, analysis of national longitudinal data (20,000+ participants over 20 years of assessment) revealed that facing financial scarcity in the course of one's life decreased self-rated and objective health and increased feelings of depression; again, these effects explained variance over and above income. Two subsidiary findings were obtained: (i) three adverse life events (illness, separation, family conflicts) predicted financial scarcity over the life course, and (ii) self-mastery (a component of sense of control) accounted for the detrimental longitudinal effects of financial scarcity on health. This research suggests that to understand socioeconomic inequality in health, one should consider not only an individual's quantity of monetary resources but also the perceived sufficiency of these resources

    Did my M.D. really go to university to learn? Detrimental effects of numerus clausus on self-efficacy, mastery goals and learning

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    International audienceExams with numerus clausus are very common in Medicine, Business Administration and Law. They are intended to select a predefined number of academic candidates on the basis of their rank rather than their absolute performance. Various scholars and politicians believe that numerus clausus policies are a vector of academic excellence. We argue, however, that they could have ironic epistemic effects. In comparison with selective policies based on criterion-based evaluations, selection via numerus clausus creates negative interdependence of competence (i.e., the success of some students comes at the expense of the others). Thus, we expect it to impair students' sense of self-efficacy and—by extension—the level of mastery goals they adopt, as well as their actual learning. Two field studies respectively reported that presence (versus absence) and awareness (versus ignorance) of numerus clausus policies at University was associated with a decreased endorsement of mastery goals; this effect was mediated by a reduction in self-efficacy beliefs. Moreover, an experimental study revealed that numerus clausus negatively predicted learning; this effect was, again, mediated by a reduction in self-efficacy beliefs. Practical implications for the selection procedures in higher education are discussed

    To confirm or to conform ? Performance goals as a regulator of conflict with more competent others

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    International audienceDespite the fact that most competence-relevant settings are socially relevant settings,the interpersonal effects of achievement goals have been understudied. This is all the more surprising in the case of performance goals, for which self-competence is assessed using an other-referenced standard. In the present research, performance-goals are conceived as a social tool for regulating interpersonal behaviors with more competent others. In the confrontation with a more (vs. equally) competent disagreeing partner, performance-approach goals (focus on approaching normative competence) should be associated with more dominant behavior, i.e., competitive conflict regulation, whereas performance-avoidance goals (focus on avoiding normative incompetence) should be associated with more submissive behavior, i.e., protective conflict regulation. Four studies give support to these predictions with self-reported conflict regulation measures (Study 1 and 3), evaluation of models associated to self-confirmation and compliance (Study 2) and conflict regulation behaviors (Study 4). Theoretical contributions to both the literature on achievement goals and that on socio-cognitive conflict, as well as practical implications for the issue of competence asymmetry in educational settings, are discussed

    Feeling Interpersonally Controlled While Pursuing Materialistic Goals: A Problematic Combination for Moral Behavior.

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    We created a life-goal assessment drawing from self-determination theory and achievement goal literature, examining its predictive power regarding immoral behavior and subjective well-being. Our source items assessed direction and energization of motivation, via the distinction between intrinsic and extrinsic aims and between intrinsic and extrinsic reasons for acting, respectively. Fused source items assessed four goal complexes representing a combination of direction and energization. Across three studies ( Ns = 109, 121, and 398), the extrinsic aim/extrinsic reason complex was consistently associated with immoral and/or unethical behavior beyond four source and three other goal complex variables. This was consistent with the triangle model of responsibility's claim that immoral behaviors may result when individuals disengage the self from moral prescriptions. The extrinsic/extrinsic complex also predicted lower subjective well-being, albeit less consistently. Our goal complex approach sheds light on how self-determination theory's goal contents and organismic integration mini-theories interact, particularly with respect to unethical behavior

    Achievement Goal

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    Achievement goals are self-regulatory commitments that provide direction to individuals as they interpret and respond to competence-relevant situations. Four types of achievement goals have been the primary focus of the literature: Masteryapproach goals (master a task; improve over time), performance-approach goals (outperform others), mastery-avoidance goals (not fall short of mastering a task; not decline over time), and performance-avoidance goals (not be outperformed by others)

    Poor adherence to antibiotic prescribing guidelines in acute otitis media—obstacles, implications, and possible solutions

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    Many countries now have guidelines on the clinical management of acute otitis media. In almost all, the public health goal of containing acquired resistance in bacteria through reduced antibiotic prescribing is the main aim and basis for recommendations. Despite some partial short-term successes, clinical activity databases and opinion surveys suggest that such restrictive guidelines are not followed closely, so this aim is not achieved. Radical new solutions are needed to tackle irrationalities in healthcare systems which set the short-term physician–patient relationship against long-term public health. Resolving this opposition will require comprehensive policy appraisal and co-ordinated actions at many levels, not just dissemination of evidence and promotion of guidelines. The inappropriate clinical rationales that underpin non-compliance with guidelines can be questioned by evidence, but also need specific developments promoting alternative solutions, within a framework of whole-system thinking. Promising developments would be (a) physician training modules on age-appropriate analgesia and on detection plus referral of rare complications like mastoiditis, and (b) vaccination against the most common and serious bacterial pathogens

    A Picture of Performance Goals in the Social Plenum: The Interpersonal Antecedents and Consequences of Performance Goals

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    Bien que les activitĂ©s oĂč la compĂ©tence est un enjeu (p. ex. : problĂšme acadĂ©mique) prennent souvent place dans des contextes interpersonnels (p. ex. : classe), hiĂ©rarchiques (p. ex. : enseignant-e/Ă©lĂšves), et spĂ©cifiques en termes de normes et de valeurs (p. ex. : culture), l'Ă©tude des buts de performance-le dĂ©sir de se montrer compĂ©tent-e relativement Ă  autrui-a le plus souvent Ă©tĂ© conduite au seul niveau intrapersonnel. S'appuyant sur le modĂšle transactionnel du stress et du coping, le modĂšle circumplexe des comportements interpersonnels, ainsi que sur la thĂ©orie de l'Ă©laboration du conflit, la premiĂšre partie de cette thĂšse rĂ©vĂšle les consĂ©quences interpersonnelles des buts de performance sur la rĂ©gulation d'un comportement spĂ©cifique, Ă  savoir le conflit sociocognitif (c.-Ă -d., une situation de confrontation avec un intĂ©ractant en dĂ©saccord) : les buts de performance-approche-le dĂ©sir d'ĂȘtre meilleur-e qu'autrui-prĂ©disent une rĂ©gulation du conflit fortement agentique (dominante), soit la validation de son point de vue au dĂ©triment de celui de l'intĂ©ractant (que nous dĂ©signons rĂ©gulation compĂ©titive) ; alors que les buts de performance-Ă©vitement-le dĂ©sir de ne pas ĂȘtre moins bon-ne qu'autrui-prĂ©disent une rĂ©gulation du conflit faiblement agentique (soumise), soit l'invalidation de son point de vue au bĂ©nĂ©fice de celui de l'intĂ©ractant (que nous dĂ©signons rĂ©gulation protective). De plus, les effets susmentionnĂ©s augmentent Ă  mesure que l'intĂ©ractant est prĂ©sentĂ© comme supĂ©rieurement (vs. similairement) compĂ©tent. S'appuyant sur la littĂ©rature sur les structures de buts de groupe, et celle sur la socialisation des valeurs, la seconde partie de cette thĂšse rĂ©vĂšle les antĂ©cĂ©dents interpersonnels des buts de performance, et plus spĂ©cifiquement le rĂŽle du superviseur dans la socialisation des buts de performance : les buts de performance-approche d'un superviseur sont positivement associĂ©s avec l'Ă©mergence au cours du temps des buts de performance-approche de ses subordonnĂ©s (particuliĂšrement lorsqu'ils se perçoivent comme compĂ©tents) et celle de leurs buts de performance-Ă©vitement (particuliĂšrement lorsqu'ils se perçoivent comme incompĂ©tents). En outre, ce phĂ©nomĂšne consistant en un processus de socialisation, les effets susmentionnĂ©s augmentent lorsque l'identification Ă  l'endogroupe des subordonnĂ©es augmente, et lorsque l'adhĂ©sion aux valeurs culturelles occidentales dominantes (c.-Ă -d., rehaussement de soi) du superviseur augmente. Dans leur ensemble, ces rĂ©sultats soulignent la nĂ©cessitĂ© d'Ă©tudier les buts dans leur plenum social, autrement dit, en adoptant une perspective interpersonnelle (c.-Ă -d., Ă©tudier les effets des buts entre les individus), positionnelle (c.-Ă -d., entre des individus de diffĂ©rentes positions sociales), et idĂ©ologique (c.- Ă -d., entre des individus se conformant Ă  des normes spĂ©cifiques et adhĂ©rant Ă  des valeurs spĂ©cifiques). -- Although competence-relevant activities (e.g., solving an academic problem) are often embedded in interpersonal (e.g., classroom), hierarchical (e.g., teacher/pupils), and norm-/value-specific (e.g., culture) settings, the study of performance goals-the desire to demonstrate competence relative to others-has mostly been conducted at the intrapersonal level alone. Drawing on the transactional model of stress and coping, the circumplex model of interpersonal behaviors, as well as on the conflict elaboration theory, the first part of this thesis reveals the interpersonal consequences of performance goals on the regulation of a specific behavior, namely socio-cognitive conflict (i.e., a situation of confrontation with a disagreeing interactant): Performance-approach goals-the desire to outperform others- predicted a highly agentic (dominant) conflict regulation, that is, the validation of one's point of view at the expense of that of the interactant (which we labeled competitive regulation); whereas performance-avoidance goals-the desire not to be outperformed by others- predicted a poorly agentic (submissive) conflict regulation, that is, the invalidation of one's point of view to the benefit of that of the interactant (which we labeled protective regulation). Furthermore, both the aforementioned effects were found to increase when the interactant was presented as being superiorly (vs. equally) in competence. Drawing on the literature on group goal structure, as well as on research on socialization of supervisors-based values, the second part of this thesis reveals the interpersonal antecedents of performance-based goals endorsement, focusing-more specifically-on the role of group-supervisors in performance goals socialization: Supervisor's performance-approach goals were positively associated with the emergence over time of subordinates' performance-approach (especially when perceiving themselves as competent) and -avoidance goals (especially when perceiving themselves as incompetent). Furthermore, providing evidence that this phenomenon essentially reflects a socialization process, both the aforementioned effects were found to increase as subordinates' in-group identification increased, and as supervisors' adherence to dominant Western values (i.e., self-enhancement values) increased. Taken together, these results advocate the need to study performance goals in their social plenum, that is, adopting an interpersonal (i.e., studying the effects of goals between individuals), positional (i.e., between individuals from different social positions), and ideological (i.e., between individuals following specific norms and endorsing specific values) perspective
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