{"title":"超越 \"创伤后\"、\"创伤\"、\"成长 \"以及创伤后成长研究中的预测。","authors":"Jonathan M Adler, Ted Schwaba","doi":"10.1037/amp0001398","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Thirty years after the introduction of posttraumatic growth (PTG), research on the concept has expanded dramatically. Novel theoretical perspectives included in this special issue, however, demonstrate that nearly every element of PTG requires revision. \"Post\" implies a definitive before and after adversity that simply does not exist, either empirically or in the everyday navigation of adversity, especially for marginalized people. \"Trauma\" is appropriately scaled to the gravity of some forms of adversity, yet the term is often overly pathologizing or flattening of individual experience. And \"growth\" is often misleading, difficult to operationalize, and always value-laden. Studying PTG requires grappling with these claims in a way that can inspire pessimism. What is left in PTG after we question the P, T, and G? In asking this question, we ultimately encounter the limits of empiricism. Drawing insights from contemporary research in lifespan development, we suggest that it may be impossible to prospectively predict, using individual-level variables, how people grapple with adversity and develop after it. There are limits to our understanding of PTG that may simply be insurmountable. But complementary perspectives in narrative research, especially those espoused in this issue, as well as in the humanities and the arts, offer a way forward. Retrospectively understanding adverse events and taking an idiographic and qualitative perspective on the ways in which people navigate them can both humanize and bolster inclusivity in PTG research. We conclude by suggesting a period of enhanced divergent exploration, one that embraces disciplinary humility and epistemological and methodological pluralism to further understand PTG. 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Novel theoretical perspectives included in this special issue, however, demonstrate that nearly every element of PTG requires revision. \\\"Post\\\" implies a definitive before and after adversity that simply does not exist, either empirically or in the everyday navigation of adversity, especially for marginalized people. \\\"Trauma\\\" is appropriately scaled to the gravity of some forms of adversity, yet the term is often overly pathologizing or flattening of individual experience. And \\\"growth\\\" is often misleading, difficult to operationalize, and always value-laden. Studying PTG requires grappling with these claims in a way that can inspire pessimism. What is left in PTG after we question the P, T, and G? In asking this question, we ultimately encounter the limits of empiricism. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
创伤后成长(Posttraumatic Growth,PTG)提出 30 年后,对这一概念的研究有了显著的扩展。然而,本特刊所收录的新理论观点表明,创伤后成长的几乎所有要素都需要修正。后 "意味着逆境之前和之后的确定性,但无论是在经验上还是在日常应对逆境的过程中,尤其是对于边缘化人群来说,这种确定性都是不存在的。"创伤 "一词与某些形式的逆境的严重程度相称,但往往过于病态化或扁平化个人经历。而 "成长 "往往具有误导性,难以操作,而且总是带有价值色彩。研究 PTG 需要以一种可能引发悲观情绪的方式来应对这些说法。在我们对 P、T 和 G 提出质疑之后,PTG 还剩下什么?在提出这个问题时,我们最终会遇到经验主义的局限。从当代生命发展研究中汲取灵感,我们认为,利用个人层面的变量来前瞻性地预测人们如何应对逆境以及逆境后的发展可能是不可能的。我们对PTG的理解可能存在根本无法克服的局限性。但是,叙事研究中的互补性视角,尤其是本期所支持的视角,以及人文和艺术视角,为我们提供了一条前进的道路。回顾性地理解不利事件,并从特异性和定性的角度看待人们应对不利事件的方式,既能使 PTG 研究人性化,又能增强 PTG 研究的包容性。最后,我们建议加强发散性探索,以学科的谦逊、认识论和方法论的多元化来进一步理解 PTG。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved)。
Beyond "post," "traumatic," "growth," and prediction in research on posttraumatic growth.
Thirty years after the introduction of posttraumatic growth (PTG), research on the concept has expanded dramatically. Novel theoretical perspectives included in this special issue, however, demonstrate that nearly every element of PTG requires revision. "Post" implies a definitive before and after adversity that simply does not exist, either empirically or in the everyday navigation of adversity, especially for marginalized people. "Trauma" is appropriately scaled to the gravity of some forms of adversity, yet the term is often overly pathologizing or flattening of individual experience. And "growth" is often misleading, difficult to operationalize, and always value-laden. Studying PTG requires grappling with these claims in a way that can inspire pessimism. What is left in PTG after we question the P, T, and G? In asking this question, we ultimately encounter the limits of empiricism. Drawing insights from contemporary research in lifespan development, we suggest that it may be impossible to prospectively predict, using individual-level variables, how people grapple with adversity and develop after it. There are limits to our understanding of PTG that may simply be insurmountable. But complementary perspectives in narrative research, especially those espoused in this issue, as well as in the humanities and the arts, offer a way forward. Retrospectively understanding adverse events and taking an idiographic and qualitative perspective on the ways in which people navigate them can both humanize and bolster inclusivity in PTG research. We conclude by suggesting a period of enhanced divergent exploration, one that embraces disciplinary humility and epistemological and methodological pluralism to further understand PTG. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
Established in 1946, American Psychologist® is the flagship peer-reviewed scholarly journal of the American Psychological Association. It publishes high-impact papers of broad interest, including empirical reports, meta-analyses, and scholarly reviews, covering psychological science, practice, education, and policy. Articles often address issues of national and international significance within the field of psychology and its relationship to society. Published in an accessible style, contributions in American Psychologist are designed to be understood by both psychologists and the general public.