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The authors examined the influence of neuroticism (N) on the occurrence of different types of daily events, primary and secondary appraisals of those events, use of specific coping strategies, and end-of-day negative mood. College students completed questionnaires at the end of every day for 14 consecutive days. When reporting their most stressful event of each day, high-N individuals, compared with low-N individuals, reported more interpersonal stressors and had more negative primary and secondary appraisals and reacted with more distress in response to increasingly negative primary and secondary appraisals. Compared with low-N individuals, high-N individuals used less-adaptive coping strategies (e.g., hostile reaction) and reacted with more distress in response to some types of coping strategies. The appraisal findings, in particular, help to explain the chronic negative affectivity associated with neuroticism.
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Kathleen C. Gunthert
American University
Lawrence H. Cohen
Takeda (United States)
Stephen Armeli
Fairleigh Dickinson University
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
University of Delaware
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Gunthert et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a10f5a38102eb4b66eec82d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.77.5.1087
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