TY - JOUR
T1 - Predicting individual differences in autonomy-connectedness
T2 - The role of body awareness, alexithymia, and assertiveness
AU - Bekker, Marrie H.J.
AU - Croon, Marcel A.
AU - Van Balkom, Esther G.A.
AU - Vermee, Jennifer B.G.
PY - 2008/6/1
Y1 - 2008/6/1
N2 - Autonomy-connectedness is the capacity for being on one's own as well as for satisfactorily engaging in interpersonal relationships. Associations have been shown between autonomy-connectedness components (self-awareness, sensitivity to others, and the capacity for managing new situations) and various indices of psychopathology. Both in a theoretical sense as well as for enhancing treatment and prevention, it is relevant to identify which factors most powerfully predict individual differences in autonomy-connectedness: body awareness, alexithymia, or assertiveness. The present study examined this question in a clinical sample of women who were diagnosed as having autonomy problems (N = 52) and in a female nonclinical community sample (N = 59). In line with expectations, assertiveness was a strong predictor of (all three components of) autonomy-connectedness, as was emotionalizing, one of the alexithymia-components, but the latter in an opposite direction than we had expected: the higher an individual's ability to emotionalize was, the less self-aware and capable to manage new situations that person was, and the more sensitive to others. Cognitive alexithymia contributed to self-awareness as well as to the capacity for managing new situations, and one of the components of body awareness appeared to predict capacity for managing new situations. Our results indicate that assertiveness training and the enhancement of emotion regulation are important elements of autonomy-connectedness targeted interventions.
AB - Autonomy-connectedness is the capacity for being on one's own as well as for satisfactorily engaging in interpersonal relationships. Associations have been shown between autonomy-connectedness components (self-awareness, sensitivity to others, and the capacity for managing new situations) and various indices of psychopathology. Both in a theoretical sense as well as for enhancing treatment and prevention, it is relevant to identify which factors most powerfully predict individual differences in autonomy-connectedness: body awareness, alexithymia, or assertiveness. The present study examined this question in a clinical sample of women who were diagnosed as having autonomy problems (N = 52) and in a female nonclinical community sample (N = 59). In line with expectations, assertiveness was a strong predictor of (all three components of) autonomy-connectedness, as was emotionalizing, one of the alexithymia-components, but the latter in an opposite direction than we had expected: the higher an individual's ability to emotionalize was, the less self-aware and capable to manage new situations that person was, and the more sensitive to others. Cognitive alexithymia contributed to self-awareness as well as to the capacity for managing new situations, and one of the components of body awareness appeared to predict capacity for managing new situations. Our results indicate that assertiveness training and the enhancement of emotion regulation are important elements of autonomy-connectedness targeted interventions.
KW - Alexithymia
KW - Assertiveness
KW - Attachment
KW - Autonomy
KW - Body awareness
KW - Connectedness
KW - Self-awareness
KW - Sensitivity to others
KW - Social skills
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U2 - 10.1002/jclp.20486
DO - 10.1002/jclp.20486
M3 - Article
C2 - 18425792
AN - SCOPUS:46049101426
SN - 0021-9762
VL - 64
SP - 747
EP - 765
JO - Journal of Clinical Psychology
JF - Journal of Clinical Psychology
IS - 6
ER -