Article published In: Narrative Inquiry
Vol. 33:1 (2023) ► pp.176–191
Incremental validity of narrative identity in predicting psychological well-being
A replication and extension in Korean adults
Published online: 23 December 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.21047.par
https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.21047.par
Abstract
The goal of the present study was to replicate and extend previous research that demonstrated the incremental validity of narrative identity in predicting psychological well-being among Korean adults. We recruited 147 Korean adults living in South Korea who completed a battery of questionnaires that assessed the Big Five traits, extrinsic value orientation, self-concept clarity, and psychological well-being. Participants then wrote a story about how they had become the persons they were, which was subsequently coded in terms of agency. We found that psychological well-being was positively related to extraversion, agreeableness, openness, conscientiousness, and self-concept clarity, but negatively to neuroticism and extrinsic value orientation. The positive relation between agency, coded from narratives, and psychological well-being was significant both with and without controlling for the other variables. These results showed that narrative identity has incremental validity in predicting well-being among individuals who live in a culture where collectivism and individualism coexist.
Article outline
- Levels of personality and incremental validity of narrative identity
- Agentic themes and psychological well-being
- Non-narrative variables
- Narrative identity research in Korea
- The present study
- Method
- Participants and procedure
- Materials
- Big five traits
- Extrinsic value orientation
- Self-concept clarity
- Psychological well-being
- Narrative prompt
- Narrative coding for agency
- Narrative length
- Results
- Discussion
- Ethical compliance section
- Compliance with ethical standards
- Conflict of interest
- Informed consent
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