Who is the most demanding of them all? A multisource investigation of other-oriented perfectionism, socially prescribed perfectionism, and depressive symptoms

People high on socially prescribed perfectionism perceive intense external pressures to be perfect, and these pressures place them at risk for depressive symptoms. Likewise, the external pressures experienced by people high on socially prescribed perfectionism appear, in part, to be a legitimate res...

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Veröffentlicht in:Personality and individual differences 2019-02, Vol.138, p.328-332
Hauptverfasser: Smith, Martin M., Sherry, Simon B., Glowacka, Maria, Speth, Tamara A., Stewart, Sherry H., Saklofske, Donald H., Etherson, Marianne E.
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container_end_page 332
container_issue
container_start_page 328
container_title Personality and individual differences
container_volume 138
creator Smith, Martin M.
Sherry, Simon B.
Glowacka, Maria
Speth, Tamara A.
Stewart, Sherry H.
Saklofske, Donald H.
Etherson, Marianne E.
description People high on socially prescribed perfectionism perceive intense external pressures to be perfect, and these pressures place them at risk for depressive symptoms. Likewise, the external pressures experienced by people high on socially prescribed perfectionism appear, in part, to be a legitimate response to members of their social network (influencers) who demand perfection from others (other-oriented perfectionists). Nonetheless, it is unclear whose other-oriented perfectionism (e.g., parents or peers) is more relevant to the socially prescribed perfectionism-depressive symptoms relationship. To address this, we studied 307 undergraduate targets and 692 influencers (mothers, fathers, siblings, peers, and romantic partners). Targets completed measures of socially prescribed perfectionism and depressive symptoms. Influencers completed measures of other-oriented perfectionism and narcissism. Path analysis revealed other-oriented perfectionism in mothers and siblings, but not other-oriented perfectionism in fathers, peers, or romantic partners, indirectly predicted targets' depressive symptoms through targets' socially prescribed perfectionism. Conversely, indirect effects corresponding to influencers' narcissism were not significant. Investigators are encouraged to continue using multisource designs to test how other-oriented perfectionism in parental and non-parental influencers depresses the recipients of their perfectionistic demands. •Studied 307 targets and 692 members of their social network (“influencers”).•Targets completed measures of socially prescribed perfectionism (SPP) and depression.•Influencers completed measures of other-oriented perfectionism (OOP) and narcissism.•Mothers' OOP and siblings' OOP predicted targets' depression via targets' SPP.•Findings were specific to influencers' OOP (vs. influencers' narcissism).
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.paid.2018.09.023
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Access via ScienceDirect (Elsevier)
subjects College students
Depression
Indirect effects
Mental depression
Mother
Multisource
Narcissism
Parents & parenting
Path analysis
Perfectionism
Romantic relationships
Sibling
Siblings
Social network
Social networks
title Who is the most demanding of them all? A multisource investigation of other-oriented perfectionism, socially prescribed perfectionism, and depressive symptoms
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