The present study tested the posited structural path of influence through which perceived self-efficacy of affect regulation operates in concert with perceived interpersonal self-efficacy to determine prosocial behavior, which in turn influences satisfaction with life in four age groups. A strong sense of efficacy in the regulation of positive and negative affect was associated with a high perceived efficacy in the management of social relationships and in empathic engagement in others' emotional experiences. Interpersonal self-efficacy directly affected prosocial behavior and entirely mediated the influence of affective self-efficacy on it. As predicted, prosocial behavior directly influenced life satisfaction, showing a higher path of influence for the oldest group as compared to the other ones. The structural model provided a better fit for the data than did alternative models.

Caprara, G., Steca, P. (2005). Self-efficacy beliefs as determinants of prosocial behavior conducive to life satisfaction across ages. JOURNAL OF SOCIAL AND CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 24(2), 191-217 [10.1521/jscp.24.2.191.62271].

Self-efficacy beliefs as determinants of prosocial behavior conducive to life satisfaction across ages

STECA, PATRIZIA
2005

Abstract

The present study tested the posited structural path of influence through which perceived self-efficacy of affect regulation operates in concert with perceived interpersonal self-efficacy to determine prosocial behavior, which in turn influences satisfaction with life in four age groups. A strong sense of efficacy in the regulation of positive and negative affect was associated with a high perceived efficacy in the management of social relationships and in empathic engagement in others' emotional experiences. Interpersonal self-efficacy directly affected prosocial behavior and entirely mediated the influence of affective self-efficacy on it. As predicted, prosocial behavior directly influenced life satisfaction, showing a higher path of influence for the oldest group as compared to the other ones. The structural model provided a better fit for the data than did alternative models.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
SOCIOEMOTIONAL SELECTIVITY; EMOTIONAL EXPERIENCE; POSITIVE EMOTIONS; NEGATIVE AFFECT; HEART-DISEASE; UNITED-STATES; OLD-AGE; SPAN; HEALTH; PERSONALITY
English
mar-2005
24
2
191
217
none
Caprara, G., Steca, P. (2005). Self-efficacy beliefs as determinants of prosocial behavior conducive to life satisfaction across ages. JOURNAL OF SOCIAL AND CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 24(2), 191-217 [10.1521/jscp.24.2.191.62271].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/1624
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