Developmental Significance of the Social Context as an Additional Self-Continuity Strategy: A Comparison of Emerging Adults From Brazil and the United States

J. Santo, Josafá M. da Cunha, A. Mitra
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Abstract

Self-continuity refers to the strategies individuals use to justify a stable sense of self despite the various changes they experience. Among young adults, in particular, self-continuity over time has been associated with indicators of mental health. The aim of the current project was to identify whether aspects of the social context are measurably distinct from other established strategies of self-continuity. Data were collected from emerging adults from the US Midwest (n = 309) and southern Brazil (n = 285). Self-continuity and its opposite, self-discontinuity, were measured, in addition to essentialism or narrativism and the social context as strategies. Structural equation modeling supported the contention that self-continuity is positively associated with strategies of essentialism, narrativism, and the social context. Models confirmed that the social context was measurably distinct from the other strategies of self-continuity and higher among older emerging adults. Finally, though the factor structure was largely identical between the two samples, some mean differences emerged.
社会背景作为一种额外的自我连续性策略的发展意义:巴西和美国新兴成人的比较
自我连续性是指个体在经历各种变化的情况下,为保持稳定的自我意识而采取的策略。特别是在年轻人中,随着时间的推移,自我连续性与心理健康指标有关。当前项目的目的是确定社会背景的各个方面是否与其他既定的自我连续性战略明显不同。数据收集自美国中西部(n = 309)和巴西南部(n = 285)的新生成人。除了本质主义或叙事主义和社会背景作为策略外,还测量了自我连续性及其对立面,自我间断。结构方程模型支持了自我连续性与本质主义、叙事主义和社会情境策略呈正相关的论点。模型证实,社会背景与其他自我连续性策略明显不同,并且在老年新成人中更高。最后,虽然两个样本之间的因子结构基本相同,但存在一些平均差异。
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