Construing benefits from adversity: adaptational significance and dispositional underpinnings.

The discovery of benefits from living with adversity has been implicated in psychological well-being in numerous investigations, is pivotal to several prominent theories of cognitive adaptation to threat, and can be predicted by personality differences. This article summarizes the prevalence and adaptive significance of finding benefits from major medical problems, locates the place of benefit-finding in stress and coping theories, and examines how it may be shaped by specific psychological dispositions such as optimism and hope and by broader personality traits such as Extraversion and Openness to Experience. The distinction between beliefs about benefits from adversity (benefit-finding) and the use of such knowledge as a deliberate strategy of coping with the problem (benefit-reminding) is underscored and illustrated by daily process research on coping with chronic pain.

[1]  C. M. Parkes,et al.  What becomes of redundant world models? A contribution to the study of adaptation to change. , 1975, The British journal of medical psychology.

[2]  C. Wortman,et al.  Attributions of blame and coping in the "real world": severe accident victims react to their lot. , 1977, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[3]  S. Thompson Will it hurt less if i can control it? A complex answer to a simple question. , 1981 .

[4]  J. Weisz,et al.  Changing the world and changing the self: A two-process model of perceived control. , 1982 .

[5]  Francis J. Keefe,et al.  The use of coping strategies in chronic low back pain patients: Relationship to patient characteristics and current adjustment , 1983, Pain.

[6]  Irene Hanson Frieze,et al.  A Theoretical Perspective for Understanding Reactions to Victimization , 1983 .

[7]  J. V. Wood,et al.  It Could Be Worse: Selective Evaluation as a Response to Victimization , 1983 .

[8]  T. Revenson,et al.  Social Supports as Stress Buffers for Adult Cancer Patients , 1983, Psychosomatic medicine.

[9]  Shelley E. Taylor Adjustment to threatening events: A theory of cognitive adaptation. , 1983 .

[10]  S. Folkman Personal control and stress and coping processes: a theoretical analysis. , 1984, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[11]  M H Liang,et al.  The psychosocial impact of systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis. , 1984, Arthritis and rheumatism.

[12]  J. V. Wood,et al.  Attributions, beliefs about control, and adjustment to breast cancer. , 1984, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[13]  P. Linville,et al.  Self-complexity and affective extremity: Don't put all of your eggs in one cognitive basket. , 1985 .

[14]  S. Thompson Finding Positive Meaning in a Stressful Event and Coping , 1985 .

[15]  Causal and Control Cognitions in Parents' Coping With Chronically Ill Children , 1985 .

[16]  C. Carver,et al.  Optimism, coping, and health: assessment and implications of generalized outcome expectancies. , 2009, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[17]  G. Affleck,et al.  Cognitive adaptations to high-risk infants: the search for mastery, meaning, and protection from future harm. , 1985, American journal of mental deficiency.

[18]  P. Costa,et al.  Personality, coping, and coping effectiveness in an adult sample , 1986 .

[19]  C. Carver,et al.  Dispositional optimism and physical well-being: the influence of generalized outcome expectancies on health. , 1987, Journal of personality.

[20]  Self-blame, compliance, and distress among burn patients. , 1987 .

[21]  G. Affleck,et al.  Causal attribution, perceived benefits, and morbidity after a heart attack: an 8-year study. , 1987, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[22]  The construction of therapeutic realities. , 1987 .

[23]  P. Linville,et al.  Self-complexity as a cognitive buffer against stress-related illness and depression. , 1987, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[24]  G. Affleck,et al.  Social comparisons in rheumatoid arthritis: Accuracy and adaptational significance. , 1988 .

[25]  G. Affleck,et al.  Social support and psychosocial adjustment to rheumatoid arthritis: Quantitative and qualitative findings. , 1988 .

[26]  C. Carver,et al.  Assessing coping strategies: a theoretically based approach. , 1989, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[27]  K. Matthews,et al.  Dispositional optimism and recovery from coronary artery bypass surgery: the beneficial effects on physical and psychological well-being. , 1989, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[28]  G. Affleck,et al.  Mothers, fathers, and the crisis of newborn intensive care , 1990 .

[29]  John R. Anderson,et al.  The will and the ways: development and validation of an individual-differences measure of hope. , 1991, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[30]  S. Thompson The Search for Meaning Following a Stroke , 1991 .

[31]  N. Bolger,et al.  Personality and the problems of everyday life: the role of neuroticism in exposure and reactivity to daily stressors. , 1991, Journal of personality.

[32]  R. Larsen,et al.  Day-to-day physical symptoms: individual differences in the occurrence, duration, and emotional concomitants of minor daily illnesses. , 1991, Journal of personality.

[33]  G. Affleck,et al.  Causal Explanations for Infertility , 1991 .

[34]  Jerry Suls,et al.  Personality and Daily Experience: The Promise and the Challenge , 1991 .

[35]  G. Affleck,et al.  Perceiving control, construing benefits, and daily processes in rheumatoid arthritis , 1992 .

[36]  Shelley E. Taylor,et al.  Modeling cognitive adaptation: a longitudinal investigation of the impact of individual differences and coping on college adjustment and performance. , 1992, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[37]  Jeffrey W. Kusulas,et al.  Distinguishing optimism from pessimism : relations to fundamental dimensions of mood and personality , 1992 .

[38]  A. Manstead,et al.  Optimism, perceived control over stress, and coping , 1993 .

[39]  C. Carver,et al.  How coping mediates the effect of optimism on distress: a study of women with early stage breast cancer. , 1993, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[40]  D. Ozer,et al.  Construct validation of optimism and pessimism in older men: findings from the normative aging study. , 1993, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[41]  J. Jaccard,et al.  Statistical analysis of temporal data with many observations: Issues for behavioral medicine data. , 1993 .

[42]  S. Shiffman,et al.  Drinking and smoking: A field study of their association. , 1994 .

[43]  Michael W. Bridges,et al.  Distinguishing optimism from neuroticism (and trait anxiety, self-mastery, and self-esteem): a reevaluation of the Life Orientation Test. , 1994, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[44]  R. Janoff-Bulman,et al.  Positive and Negative Self-Complexity: Patterns of Adjustment Following Traumatic Versus Non-Traumatic Life Experiences , 1994 .

[45]  J. Paty,et al.  Individual differences in intraperson variability in mood. , 1994, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[46]  G. Affleck,et al.  Person and contextual features of daily stress reactivity: individual differences in relations of undesirable daily events with mood disturbance and chronic pain intensity. , 1994, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[47]  J. Suls,et al.  A multilevel data-analytic approach for evaluation of relationships between daily life stressors and symptomatology: patients with irritable bowel syndrome. , 1994, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[48]  L. Halman,et al.  The Role of Perceived Control, Attributions, and Meaning in Members of Infertile Couples' Well-Being , 1995 .

[49]  Crystal L. Park,et al.  Assessment and prediction of stress-related growth. , 1996, Journal of personality.

[50]  R. Tedeschi,et al.  The Posttraumatic Growth Inventory: Measuring the positive legacy of trauma , 1996 .

[51]  G. Affleck,et al.  A dual pathway model of daily stressor effects on rheumatoid arthritis , 1997, Annals of behavioral medicine : a publication of the Society of Behavioral Medicine.