TY - JOUR
T1 - Internal representations of others in self-regulation
T2 - A new look at a classic issue
AU - Moretti, Marlene M.
AU - Higgins, E. Tory
PY - 1999
Y1 - 1999
N2 - The impact of internal representations of others on self-regulation has received little empirical attention. The current study measured people's own guides for their behavior and the guides they believed their parents held for them and distinguished between: (a) guides perceived as shared between oneself and parents (i.e., identified guides); (b) perceived parental guides not adopted as one's own (i.e., introjected guides); and (c) self-guides independent from one's parents. As hypothesized, only identified and independent guides significantly predicted emotional and interpersonal functioning. Introjected guides, the "felt presence" of parents within the self-system, did not predict functioning. Significant sex differences were found: Independent self-guides predicted emotional and interpersonal problems in men but not women; identified self-guides predicted functioning in women but not men. Results are discussed in relation to psychodynamic and relational theories of self-development and research on gender differences in socialization. The benefits and liabilities of a self-regulatory focus that emphasizes self-other relatedness are discussed.
AB - The impact of internal representations of others on self-regulation has received little empirical attention. The current study measured people's own guides for their behavior and the guides they believed their parents held for them and distinguished between: (a) guides perceived as shared between oneself and parents (i.e., identified guides); (b) perceived parental guides not adopted as one's own (i.e., introjected guides); and (c) self-guides independent from one's parents. As hypothesized, only identified and independent guides significantly predicted emotional and interpersonal functioning. Introjected guides, the "felt presence" of parents within the self-system, did not predict functioning. Significant sex differences were found: Independent self-guides predicted emotional and interpersonal problems in men but not women; identified self-guides predicted functioning in women but not men. Results are discussed in relation to psychodynamic and relational theories of self-development and research on gender differences in socialization. The benefits and liabilities of a self-regulatory focus that emphasizes self-other relatedness are discussed.
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U2 - 10.1521/soco.1999.17.2.186
DO - 10.1521/soco.1999.17.2.186
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0033243158
SN - 0278-016X
VL - 17
SP - 186
EP - 208
JO - Social Cognition
JF - Social Cognition
IS - 2
ER -