Jonathon Brown, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
| Degree From: University of California, Los Angeles |
| Interests: Nature, Origins, & Consequences of Self-Esteem |
Contact
Advising
| Do I accept and train new psychology graduate students in general? |
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| No |
| Am I accepting new graduate students in the upcoming year? |
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| No 2009-2010 |
Research
My research is concerned with understanding the nature, origins, and consequences of self-esteem.
I believe that, across cultures, self-esteem develops at a very early, preverbal age in response to biological (temperamental) and interpersonal factors (e.g., introjected parental love and attachment). For most people, these feelings remain throughout life. I also believe that self-esteem matters most when people experience negative feedback (e.g., failure, criticism, rejection, ostracism). Although negative feedback leads low self-esteem people to feel humiliated and ashamed of themselves, it does not have this effect among high self-esteem people. This is the principal value of having high self-esteem: It allows you to fail without feeling bad about yourself.
Research Publications
- Brown, J. D., Cai, H., Oakes, M. A., & Deng, C. (2009). Cultural similarities in self-esteem functioning: East is East and West is West, but sometimes the twain do meet. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 40, 140-157.
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- Marshall, M. A., & Brown, J. D. (2006). Trait aggressiveness and situational provocation. A test of the "Traits as Situational Sensitivities (TASS)" Model. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 32, 1100-1113.
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- Brown, J. D., & Marshall, M. A. (2001). Self-esteem and emotion: Some thoughts about feelings. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 27, 575-584.
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- Dutton, K. A., & Brown, J. D. (1997). Global self-esteem and specific self-views as determinants of people's reactions to success and failure. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 73, 139-148.
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- Brown, J. D., & Dutton, K. A. (1995). The thrill of victory, the complexity of defeat: Self-esteem and people_s emotional reactions to success and failure. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 68, 712-722.
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