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- Title
An Experimental Investigation of Consistency in Female Undergraduates' Reports of Coping Efforts for the Same Versus Different Stressful Situations.
- Authors
Jorgensen, Randall S.; Dusek, Jerome B.; Richards, C. Steven; McIntyre, Julie Guay
- Abstract
For each of 3 event categories (harm/loss, threat, challenge), with a 6-week test-retest time interval, female undergraduates were randomly assigned to report on coping efforts (problem- vs. emotion-focused coping) for the same stressful event or a different stressful event across the 2 sessions. For problem-focused coping and each category of stressor, test-retest correlations were strongest when subjects reported on coping efforts for the same situation but were still of moderate size and significant for reports of coping with different stressful situations. This difference between conditions was found only for the challenge stressor for emotion-focused coping. These findings imply that stressor context, type of coping, and response tendencies across different stressors relate to the reliability of self-reported coping efforts.
- Subjects
LIFE change events; UNDERGRADUATES; EMOTIONS; PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation; RELIABILITY (Personality trait); EVERYDAY life
- Publication
Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science, 2009, Vol 41, Issue 1, p51
- ISSN
0008-400X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1037/a0014057