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Journal ArticleDOI

Society and the Adolescent Self-Image

D. J. Lee
- 01 May 1969 - 
- Vol. 3, Iss: 2, pp 280-280
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This article is published in Sociology.The article was published on 1969-05-01. It has received 16312 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Child and adolescent psychiatry.

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Overweight, obesity, and health-related quality of life among adolescents: the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health.

TL;DR: It is found that obesity in adolescence is linked with poor physical quality of life and in the general population, adolescents with above normal body mass did not report poorer emotional, school, or social functioning.
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Narcissistic admiration and rivalry: disentangling the bright and dark sides of narcissism.

TL;DR: It is shown that narcissistic admiration and rivalry are positively correlated dimensions, yet they have markedly different nomological networks and distinct intra- and interpersonal consequences, underscore the utility of a 2-dimensional conceptualization and measurement of narcissism.
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When Bad Things Turn Good and Good Things Turn Bad: Sequences of Redemption and Contamination in Life Narrative and their Relation to Psychosocial Adaptation in Midlife Adults and in Students

TL;DR: This article found that redemption sequences in life narrative accounts were positively associated with self-report measures of psychological well-being, whereas contamination sequences predicted low levels of wellbeing among midlife adults.
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Intensity and Frequency: Dimensions Underlying Positive and Negative Affect

TL;DR: Two dimensions are proposed for personal affective structure: the frequency of positive versus negative affect and the intensity of affect, which helps explain the relative independence of positive and negative affect.
Journal ArticleDOI

Low self-esteem prospectively predicts depression in adolescence and young adulthood

TL;DR: Cross-lagged regression analyses indicated that low self-esteem predicted subsequent levels of depression, but depression did not predict subsequent Levels of Self-esteem, and the results supported the vulnerability model, but not the scar model, of self- esteem and depression.