This study explored the relationships between self-esteem level and self-esteem variability at work with parameters of diurnal cortisol rhythm, using intensive longitudinal data collected during two consecutive working days from N = 166 workers. Participants self-reported measures of sex, height, weight, self-esteem, neuroticism, and negative events at T0. Then, they answered a single item of self-esteem 4 times per day. Self-esteem variability was assessed by means of the relative variability index approach proposed by Mestdagh et al. (2018). Further, participants collected salivary samples at specific time points for analysis of diurnal cortisol patterns. Self-esteem average levels and a specific form of self-esteem variability were associated with diurnal cortisol parameters. In particular, results showed a relationship between low self-esteem and blunted cortisol awakening response, specifically when low self-esteem levels were stable over time. Moreover, self-esteem variability predicted a lower diurnal cortisol decline and a smaller magnitude of overall cortisol production. Present findings highlight the neuroendocrine correlates of self-esteem level and variation at work, suggesting potential pathways by which short-term variability in self-esteem states may impact hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis functioning and long-term workers' health and well-being.

The association of self-esteem variability with diurnal cortisol patterns in a sample of adult workers

Pasquali, Vittorio
2023-01-01

Abstract

This study explored the relationships between self-esteem level and self-esteem variability at work with parameters of diurnal cortisol rhythm, using intensive longitudinal data collected during two consecutive working days from N = 166 workers. Participants self-reported measures of sex, height, weight, self-esteem, neuroticism, and negative events at T0. Then, they answered a single item of self-esteem 4 times per day. Self-esteem variability was assessed by means of the relative variability index approach proposed by Mestdagh et al. (2018). Further, participants collected salivary samples at specific time points for analysis of diurnal cortisol patterns. Self-esteem average levels and a specific form of self-esteem variability were associated with diurnal cortisol parameters. In particular, results showed a relationship between low self-esteem and blunted cortisol awakening response, specifically when low self-esteem levels were stable over time. Moreover, self-esteem variability predicted a lower diurnal cortisol decline and a smaller magnitude of overall cortisol production. Present findings highlight the neuroendocrine correlates of self-esteem level and variation at work, suggesting potential pathways by which short-term variability in self-esteem states may impact hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis functioning and long-term workers' health and well-being.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11587/517442
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