Search
Skip to Search Results- 18Self-esteem
- 3Control (Psychology)
- 3Terror management theory
- 2Self-concept
- 2Self-confidence
- 1Abused wives--Psychology
- 1Barbara Anne Baillie
- 1Brown, Dennis H.
- 1Crooks, Maxine Marilynn
- 1Faucher, Erik
- 1Faucher, Erik H
- 1Fok, Joyce J
-
Older Adults and Generativity: Developmental, Experimental, and Clinical Advances in Terror Management Theory
DownloadSpring 2013
Terror Management Theory (TMT) (Greenberg, Pyszczynski, & Solomon, 1986) offers an empirical framework to explore how human beings function despite their fear of death. TMT studies have shown that in order to buffer death anxiety, people strive to meet the standards of their cultural worldview. ...
-
On the Relationship Between Conscious and Unconscious Death Reminders, Self-esteem, and Self-control
DownloadFall 2014
When thoughts of death become conscious individuals attempt to suppress them, which consumes self-control resources. Once consumed, performance on subsequent tasks requiring self-control tends to suffer. However, terror management theory would predict the exact opposite pattern of performance...
-
Optimism, Pessimism, and Terror Management: Evidence That Strategic Optimists Experience DTA Using Incongruent Self-Regulation After Self-esteem Threat
DownloadFall 2010
Terror management theory (TMT) has accumulated a large literature over the past two decades, but has yet to examine whether forms of optimism and pessimism serve a terror management function. The present study tested the death thought accessibility (DTA) hypothesis using a general self-esteem...
-
Fall 2010
In two essays I investigate two antecedents of self-concept change in consumers: Threats to the self and the activated self-construal and its effect on goal conflict resolution. In the first essay, I explore identity strictly as consumers define themselves in terms of the possessions with which...