Je. Nurmi et al., IDENTITY PROCESSING ORIENTATION, COGNITIVE AND BEHAVIORAL STRATEGIES AND WELL-BEING, International journal of behavioral development, 21(3), 1997, pp. 555-570
The aim of this study was to investigate interrelationships among the
identity negotiation styles that people use, the cognitive and behavio
ural strategies they deploy, and their sense of subjective well-being.
To examine this, 198 American and 109 Finnish college students comple
ted the Identity Style Inventory, the Strategy and Attribution Questio
nnaire, Rosenberg's Self-esteem Scale, and the revised Beck's Depressi
on Inventory. Results showed that people with an information-oriented
identity style reported the highest level of self-esteem, those with a
normative style had the most stable self-conceptions, and those with
a diffuse/avoidant style displayed the highest level of depressive sym
ptomatology. Moreover, dysfunctional cognitive and attributional strat
egies, such as expecting to fail and engaging in task-irrelevant behav
iour, were associated with low self-esteem, unstable self-conceptions,
and depressive symptomatology. Finally, the associations between iden
tity processing styles and well-being were found to be mediated by the
cognitive strategies that people deploy.