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Impact of Interpersonal Conflict on Individuals High in Unmitigated Communion

journal contribution
posted on 2006-07-01, 00:00 authored by Kerry A. Reynolds, Vicki HelgesonVicki Helgeson, Howard SeltmanHoward Seltman, Denise DevertsDenise Deverts, Elizabeth Page-Gould, Margaret Wardle

The current study examined the impact of interpersonal conflict on mood and physical symptoms for individuals who scored high on a personality characteristic called unmitigated communion (UC), as compared to individuals who did not score high in UC. UC is defined as a focus on others to the exclusion of the self. Forty-one undergraduate students participated in 7 consecutive nightly interviews. Participants described their social interactions, indicated whether the interaction involved interpersonal conflict, and indicated their distress and physical symptoms at the end of the day. Multilevel modeling analysis demonstrated that conflict adversely affected UC and non-UC individuals similarly on the same day, but had a more negative impact for UC individuals on the following day.

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2006-07-01

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