Fr. 85.00

Redesigning Research on Post-Traumatic Growth - Challenges, Pitfalls, and New Directions

English · Hardback

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Redesigning Research on Post-Traumatic Growth offers new directions for post-traumatic growth research. The book illustrates the benefits of research designs that incorporate multiple methods of assessment and highlights the value of integrating various disciplines, such as philosophy and multiple areas of psychology (e.g., clinical, developmental, health, and personality) for more holistic understanding of the human capacity to overcome adversity.

List of contents










  • 1. Growth and the Multiple Dimensions of Well-Being: A Philosopher's Take on the Idea of Post-Traumatic Growth

  • Valerie Tiberius


  • 2. Current Assessment and Interpretation of Perceived Post-Traumatic Growth

  • Crystal L. Park and Adriel Boals

  • 3. Post-Traumatic Growth Interventions

  • Ann Marie Roepke, Areti Zikopoulos, and Marie Forgeard

  • 4. Using Dynamic Personality Theories, Cognitive Neuroscience, and mHealth to Uncover the Process of Post-Traumatic Personality Change in Women with Breast Cancer

  • Lara M. Baez, Michael H. Antoni, and Aaron S. Heller

  • 5. Using Methods from Personality Psychology to Study Post-Traumatic Growth

  • Eranda Jayawickreme and Sara Etz Mendonça

  • 6. Emotions and Positive Personality Change in Syrian Origin Young Adults Who Have Recently Resettled in the Netherlands

  • Odilia M. Laceulle, Kinan Alajak, Eva Alisic, Zeina Al Sawaf, Haza F. Rahim, Renée Zonneveld, Joanne M. Chung


  • 7. Post-Traumatic Growth in Later Adulthood: Disentangling Shorter-and Longer-Term Changes Following Transitions into Senior Housing Facilities

  • Gloria Luong, J. Doug Coatsworth, and Sy-Miin Chow


  • 8. Prospectively Examining the Effects of a Cancer Diagnosis on Patients, Spouses/Partners, and their Relationship

  • Elaine O. Cheung, Frank J. Penedo, Judith T. Moskowitz, Betina Yanez, Sheetal M. Kircher, Shilajit D. Kundu, Sarah C. Flury, and Patricia I. Moreno


  • 9. Using Culturally and Contextually Informed Theorizing in Research on Post-Traumatic Growth

  • Rebecca M. B. White, Gustavo Carlo, George P. Knight, Jenn Yun-Tein, Nancy A. Gonzales, and Alexandria Curlee


  • 10. Modeling Growth and Resilience among Military Personnel: How Using Different Models Yields Different Answers

  • William J. Chopik


  • 11. Studying Post-Traumatic Growth across the Adult Lifespan: Conceptual and Methodological Considerations

  • Omar E. Staben, Molly J. Gardner, Frank J. Infurna, Suniya S. Luthar, and Kevin J. Grimm


  • 12. Considering Characteristics of Events in Research on Post-Traumatic Growth

  • Maike Luhmann and Ina Fassbender


  • 13. Openness to Experience and Post-Traumatic Growth

  • Marie Forgeard, Elana Bayer-Pacht, Paul J. Silvia, Ann Marie Roepke, and Thröstur Björgvinsson


  • 14. The Relationship between Narration and Character Growth after Interpersonal Failures and Transgressions

  • Laura E. R. Blackie and Kate C. McLean


  • 15. Pathways from Adversity to Wisdom

  • Anna Dorfman, David A. Moscovitch, and Igor Grossmann


  • 16. Redesigning Research on Post-Traumatic Growth: Current Knowledge and New Directions

  • Frank J. Infurna and Eranda Jayawickreme



About the author

Frank J. Infurna, PhD, is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology at Arizona State University. Dr. Infurna's professional work focuses on resilience to major life stressors and psychosocial factors that contribute to healthy aging outcomes across adulthood and old age. His research on major life stressors has shown that contrary to previous research, resilience is not the modal response to major life stressors, but in fact individuals typically show substantial declines in psychological functioning, followed by gradual improvements near-previous levels.

Eranda Jayawickreme, PhD is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology and Senior Research Fellow at the Program for Leadership and Character at Wake Forest University. Dr. Jayawickreme's research focuses on post-traumatic growth as positive personality change, moral personality, wisdom, well-being and integrative theories of personality. His work with populations in Rwanda, Sri Lanka, and the USA has made

substantial contributions to further understanding whether and how growth is possible following adversity.

Summary

The literature on post-traumatic growth (PTG) has been instrumental in highlighting the human capacity to overcome adversity, illuminating the different pathways people may follow when confronted with adversity. Although the theme of strength from adversity is central to many disciplines and certain cultural narratives, these claims lack robust empirical evidence. This literature gap can be traced to a reliance on retrospective assessments for methodology and difficulty in determining which outcomes are most appropriate for studying PTG.

Redesigning Research on Post-Traumatic Growth offers new directions for PTG research. The book illustrates the benefits of research designs that incorporate multiple methods of assessment and highlights the value of integrating various disciplines, such as philosophy and multiple areas of psychology (e.g., clinical, developmental, health, and personality) for more holistic understanding of the human capacity to overcome adversity. The book is divided into four sections: current challenges in examining PTG, methodological advancements, research in specific populations, and opportunities for further research. Introductory chapters identify the limits of traditional PTG assessments and find solutions in prospective longitudinal studies. From here, this methodology is put into practice with unique case examples from studies with Syrian refugees, older adults, and couples coping with a cancer diagnosis. The book concludes with calls for further research on event characteristics of adversity, as well as narrative identity, wisdom, and open-mindedness as key growth outcomes. Redesigning Research on Post-Traumatic Growth will serve as the starting point for the next generation of research on PTG

Additional text

This edited volume should be required reading for anyone interested in truly understanding the phenomenon of post-traumatic growth. The research described herein uses cutting edge methods and diverse samples to seriously grapple with the conceptual and methodological issues that have hampered our understanding post-traumatic growth to date."

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