Shimizu Mitsuru, Pelham Brett W
Department of Psychology, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14260, USA.
Health Psychol. 2004 Jan;23(1):101-5. doi: 10.1037/0278-6133.23.1.101.
J. D. Brown and K. L. McGill (1989) found that positive life events were associated with better health only for people high in self-esteem. Among people low in self-esteem, positive life events were associated with poorer health. The authors of this study replicated this finding in a self-report survey of 61 male and 110 female college students. In addition, they showed that implicit self-esteem moderated the relation between positive life events and self-reported health in the same fashion as explicit self-esteem did. Whereas people high in implicit self-esteem reported being healthier when they experienced more positive life events, people low in implicit self-esteem reported being healthier when they experienced fewer positive life events. Moreover, the effects of implicit self-esteem were statistically independent of the effects of explicit self-esteem.
J. D. 布朗和K. L. 麦吉尔(1989年)发现,只有自尊水平高的人,积极的生活事件才与更好的健康状况相关。在自尊水平低的人当中,积极的生活事件与较差的健康状况相关。该研究的作者在一项对61名男大学生和110名女大学生的自我报告调查中重复了这一发现。此外,他们还表明,内隐自尊以与外显自尊相同的方式调节了积极生活事件与自我报告健康之间的关系。内隐自尊水平高的人在经历更多积极生活事件时报告自己更健康,而内隐自尊水平低的人在经历较少积极生活事件时报告自己更健康。此外,内隐自尊的影响在统计上独立于外显自尊的影响。