Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2003Because a significant part of individuals' lives involve close relationships, an important and substantial part of the situations they encounter consists of other people's behaviors. The present paper suggests that individuals' characteristic ways of behaving, which are typically attributed to "personality," arise from two processes: One lies primarily within the individual, conceptualized as individual differences in people's cognitive and affective processing system. The other process, which has received less attention in personality research, lies outside the person in the individual differences in the situations that people encounter in their everyday lives. This latter process is particula...
Our personalities (who we are) influence our social relationships (how we relate to people around us...
This chapter reviews structural and process assumptions of the Contemporary Integrative Interpersona...
The authors propose an interpersonal social–cognitive theory of the self and personality, the relati...
ABSTRACT Because a significant part of individuals ’ lives involve close relationships, an important...
ABSTRACT A common theme that has emerged from classic and contemporary theoretical work in both the ...
The implications of conceptualizing personality as a cognitive-affective processing system thatfunct...
Personality and social relationships influence each other in multiple and consequential ways. To und...
Interpersonal theory assumes that the most important expressions of personality and psychopathology ...
This chapter outlines how the objective and subjective interdependence structure of social situation...
The present thesis examines individual and dyadic personality development with a particular focus on...
Our personalities (who we are) influence our social relationships (how we relate to people around us...
Clinical and basic personality psychologists interact less than they should, given their similar int...
Our personalities (who we are) influence our social relationships (how we relate to people around us...
The purpose of this article is to demonstrate that personality pathology is, at its core, fundamenta...
The structure of individual differences in behavioral profiles across situations constitutes a royal...
Our personalities (who we are) influence our social relationships (how we relate to people around us...
This chapter reviews structural and process assumptions of the Contemporary Integrative Interpersona...
The authors propose an interpersonal social–cognitive theory of the self and personality, the relati...
ABSTRACT Because a significant part of individuals ’ lives involve close relationships, an important...
ABSTRACT A common theme that has emerged from classic and contemporary theoretical work in both the ...
The implications of conceptualizing personality as a cognitive-affective processing system thatfunct...
Personality and social relationships influence each other in multiple and consequential ways. To und...
Interpersonal theory assumes that the most important expressions of personality and psychopathology ...
This chapter outlines how the objective and subjective interdependence structure of social situation...
The present thesis examines individual and dyadic personality development with a particular focus on...
Our personalities (who we are) influence our social relationships (how we relate to people around us...
Clinical and basic personality psychologists interact less than they should, given their similar int...
Our personalities (who we are) influence our social relationships (how we relate to people around us...
The purpose of this article is to demonstrate that personality pathology is, at its core, fundamenta...
The structure of individual differences in behavioral profiles across situations constitutes a royal...
Our personalities (who we are) influence our social relationships (how we relate to people around us...
This chapter reviews structural and process assumptions of the Contemporary Integrative Interpersona...
The authors propose an interpersonal social–cognitive theory of the self and personality, the relati...