TY - JOUR
T1 - Defending a coherent autobiography
T2 - When past events appear incoherent, mortality salience prompts compensatory bolstering of the past's significance and the future's orderliness
AU - Landau, Mark J.
AU - Greenberg, Jeff
AU - Sullivan, Daniel
PY - 2009/8
Y1 - 2009/8
N2 - Drawing on terror management theory, we propose that maintaining a coherent autobiography protects the individual from mortality concerns by imbuing experience over time with significance and order. Two studies test whether mortality salience combined with a threat to autobiographical coherence (induced by an alphabetical organization of past events) prompts compensatory bolstering of the significance and orderliness of temporal experience. In Study 1, whereas exclusionprimed participants led to organize past events alphabetically perceived their past as less significant, mortality salient participants showed a compensatory boost in perceptions of their past's significance. In Study 2, mortality salience and an alphabetic event organization led participants high in personal need for structure to parse their future into clearly defined temporal intervals. This research is the first to experimentally assess the role of existential concerns in people's motivation to defend the significance and structure of their temporal experience against threats to autobiographical coherence.
AB - Drawing on terror management theory, we propose that maintaining a coherent autobiography protects the individual from mortality concerns by imbuing experience over time with significance and order. Two studies test whether mortality salience combined with a threat to autobiographical coherence (induced by an alphabetical organization of past events) prompts compensatory bolstering of the significance and orderliness of temporal experience. In Study 1, whereas exclusionprimed participants led to organize past events alphabetically perceived their past as less significant, mortality salient participants showed a compensatory boost in perceptions of their past's significance. In Study 2, mortality salience and an alphabetic event organization led participants high in personal need for structure to parse their future into clearly defined temporal intervals. This research is the first to experimentally assess the role of existential concerns in people's motivation to defend the significance and structure of their temporal experience against threats to autobiographical coherence.
KW - Autobiographical coherence
KW - Personal need for structure
KW - Self-narrative
KW - Terror management theory
KW - Time
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U2 - 10.1177/0146167209336608
DO - 10.1177/0146167209336608
M3 - Article
C2 - 19491330
AN - SCOPUS:69149105710
VL - 35
SP - 1012
EP - 1020
JO - Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
JF - Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
SN - 0146-1672
IS - 8
ER -