Self-esteem: a behavioural genetic perspective
Self-esteem: a behavioural genetic perspective
Self‐esteem, the affective or evaluative appraisal of one's self, is linked with adaptive personality functioning: high self‐esteem is associated with psychological health benefits (e.g. subjective well‐being, absence of depression and anxiety), effective coping with illness, and satisfactory social relationships. Although several pathways have been hypothesized to effect within‐family transmission of self‐esteem (e.g. parenting style, family relationship patterns), we focus in this article on genetic influences. Genetic studies on both global and domain‐specific self‐esteem and on both level and stability of self‐esteem converge in showing that (i) genetic influences on self‐esteem are substantial, (ii) shared environmental influences are minimal, and (iii) non‐shared environmental influences explain the largest amount of variance in self‐esteem. We advocate that understanding of current issues in self‐esteem research will be enriched by including behavioural genetic approaches.
351-367
Neiss, Michelle B.
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Sedikides, Constantine
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Stevenson, Jim
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September 2002
Neiss, Michelle B.
f2c67500-f099-4ed7-99d9-b8629d9e37a4
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Stevenson, Jim
570c03e3-40d1-409c-9e28-15cc5828d8f1
Neiss, Michelle B., Sedikides, Constantine and Stevenson, Jim
(2002)
Self-esteem: a behavioural genetic perspective.
European Journal of Personality, 16, .
(doi:10.1002/per.456).
Abstract
Self‐esteem, the affective or evaluative appraisal of one's self, is linked with adaptive personality functioning: high self‐esteem is associated with psychological health benefits (e.g. subjective well‐being, absence of depression and anxiety), effective coping with illness, and satisfactory social relationships. Although several pathways have been hypothesized to effect within‐family transmission of self‐esteem (e.g. parenting style, family relationship patterns), we focus in this article on genetic influences. Genetic studies on both global and domain‐specific self‐esteem and on both level and stability of self‐esteem converge in showing that (i) genetic influences on self‐esteem are substantial, (ii) shared environmental influences are minimal, and (iii) non‐shared environmental influences explain the largest amount of variance in self‐esteem. We advocate that understanding of current issues in self‐esteem research will be enriched by including behavioural genetic approaches.
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Neiss, Sedikides, & Stevenson, 2002
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e-pub ahead of print date: 17 May 2002
Published date: September 2002
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Local EPrints ID: 56750
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/56750
ISSN: 0890-2070
PURE UUID: 70ee27ec-428c-47d1-9c29-5f6f0618ff70
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Date deposited: 06 Aug 2008
Last modified: 23 Apr 2026 01:39
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Author:
Michelle B. Neiss
Author:
Jim Stevenson
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