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The Complexities of 'Minding the Gap': Perceived Discrepancies Between Values and Behavior Affect Well-Being

Authors :
Megan Chrystal
Johannes A. Karl
Ronald Fischer
Source :
Frontiers in Psychology, Frontiers in Psychology, Vol 10 (2019), Chrystal, Megan, Karl, Johannes Alfons ORCID: 0000-0001-5166-0728 and Fischer, Ronald ORCID: 0000-0002-3055-3955 (2019) The complexities of “minding the gap”: perceived discrepancies between Values and behavior affect well-being. Frontiers in Psychology, 10 . ISSN 1664-1078
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2019.

Abstract

Research on self-determination theory and clinical models such as acceptance and commitment therapy has shown that behaving in line with our values is a key to maintaining healthy well-being. Combining work on values and experimental studies on moral hypocrisy and well-being, we experimentally tested how behaving incongruently with values affects well-being. We hypothesized that discrepancies between how one thinks one should have behaved and how one reported one did behave would be more detrimental to well-being when the behaviors were value-expressive and motivationally coherent compared to a control condition; greater perceived gaps between how participants feel they should have acted and how they report they did act would be associated with more negative well-being outcomes; the relationship between value manipulation and well-being would be mediated by perceived behavioral gap; and that personal values would interact with value manipulation to produce differential effects on well-being. One-hundred and fifty-eight first-year psychology students participated in an experiment designed to highlight discrepancies between how participants have behaved in accordance with a certain value and how they think they should have behaved, before reporting their well-being. As hypothesized, greater discrepancies between reported past behavior and how participants thought they should have behaved was associated with negative affect and decreased reports of positive well-being. We found no evidence for differential effects of manipulated value-expressive behaviors on well-being, or for our hypothesis that personal values and manipulated value-expressive behaviors interact. Nevertheless, value content mattered in terms of inducing perceived behavioral gaps. Our study suggests that perceived discrepancies between any value and reported past behavior can have a negative impact on some aspects of well-being. We discuss how the application of our methodology can be used in further studies to disentangle the value-behavior nexus.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16641078
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....11dd118fc66afc86988355f5f9791e94