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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Identity processing style and cognitive attributional strategies: similarities and difference across different contexts
Jari-erik NurmiKaisa TammiAndrew KinneyMichael D. BerzonskyMichael D. Berzonskysubject
Strategic planningSocial PsychologyNormativeIdentity (social science)Context (language use)CognitionInterpersonal communicationAttributionPsychologySocial psychologyDevelopmental psychologyStyle (sociolinguistics)description
Identity processing style refers to the manner in which individuals approach or manage to avoid identity relevant problems and decisions. Two studies were designed to investigate the relationship between identity style and the specific cognitive and attributional strategies youth deploy in achievement and affiliative contexts. In Study 1, 198 American late adolescents filled in the revised Identity Style Inventory and a Strategy and Attribution Questionnaire. In Study 2, 109 Finnish late adolescents filled in the same measures. Study 1 revealed that diffuse/avoidant-oriented American youth relied on maladaptive strategies in both contexts. Information-oriented youth engaged in more strategic planning than did their normative and diffuse/avoidant counterparts. Study 2 indicated an identical pattern of associations among the identity processing styles and cognitive and attributional strategies for Finnish youth in achievement but not in interpersonal settings. The results are discussed in the context of a social–cognitive theory of identity development. Copyright © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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1999-03-01 | European Journal of Personality |