Tara C. Marshall
Brunel University London
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Tara C. Marshall.
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 2005
Penelope Lockwood; Tara C. Marshall; Pamela Sadler
In two studies, cross-cultural differences in reactions to positive and negative role models were examined. The authors predicted that individuals from collectivistic cultures, who have a stronger prevention orientation, would be most motivated by negative role models, who highlight a strategy of avoiding failure; individuals from individualistic cultures, who have a stronger promotion focus, would be most motivated by positive role models, who highlight a strategy of pursuing success. In Study 1, the authors examined participants’ reported preferences for positive and negative role models. Asian Canadian participants reported finding negative models more motivating than did European Canadians; self-construals and regulatory focus mediated cultural differences in reactions to role models. In Study 2, the authors examined the impact of role models on the academic motivation of Asian Canadian and European Canadian participants. Asian Canadians were motivated only by a negative model, and European Canadians were motivated only by a positive model.
American Heart Journal | 1988
Gerald Wisenberg; Frank S. Prato; S.Edwin Carroll; Katherine L. Turner; Tara C. Marshall
To compare nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) image-derived T1 and T2 changes during evolving infarction, 14 dogs were studied serially: (1) 1 to 2 hours after left anterior descending coronary occlusion, (2) 2 to 3 hours after coronary occlusion (n = 7) or in the first hour after reperfusion following 2 hours of occlusion (n = 7), and (3) 5 days and (4) 21 days after occlusion/reperfusion. In addition, the extent of T1 and T2 abnormalities was compared to the extent of infarction as determined histologically for each set of images. With sustained coronary occlusion, an increase versus control values (T1 = 351 +/- 11 msec; T2 = 41 +/- 2 msec) was observed in the second hour after occlusion (T1 = 448 +/- 51 msec; T2 = 51 +/- 8 msec), gradually reaching a maximum by day 5 (T1 = 490 +/- 64 msec; T2 = 63 +/- 9 msec). By 21 days, T1 had decreased to 427 +/- 43 msec and T2 to 55 +/- 11 msec. However, with myocardial reperfusion, an abrupt increase in both T1 and T2 occurred compared to prereperfusion values in the first hour after release of occlusion, from 445 +/- 32 msec to 555 +/- 65 msec and from 52 +/- 5 msec to 65 +/- 8 msec, respectively. Subsequently, T1 remained elevated whereas T2 normalized. Only on day 21 images was there a good correlation between the extent of T1 and T2 abnormalities and infarct size, in both nonreperfused (r = 0.87; p less than 0.05), and reperfused (r = 0.89; p less than 0.01) dogs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2003
Romin W. Tafarodi; Tara C. Marshall; Alan B. Milne
This article describes two potential bases for memory bias associated with global self-esteem. According to the mood-congruence model, activation of either dimension of self-esteem (self-competence or self-liking) produces an affective state that facilitates retrieval of traces that are consistent with that state while hindering retrieval of traces that are inconsistent. According to the relevance model, activation of either dimension results in superior encoding of matching negative content by individuals who are low on the dimension. Three studies were conducted to determine which model best accounts for the pattern of bias across distinct content categories. Results were generally consistent with the relevance model.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1988
Gerald Wisenberg; Keith J. Finnie; George Jablonsky; William J. Kostuk; Tara C. Marshall
Sixty-six patients presenting with their first evolving transmural acute myocardial infarction (AMI) were randomized to receive either streptokinase (n = 41) or placebo therapies (n = 25) within 6 hours of the onset of chest pain. These patients then underwent supine rest, exercise and after-nitroglycerin radionuclide angiography 3 weeks after AMI. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) imaging was performed at 3 weeks as a more direct estimate of AMI size. Although peak creatine kinase values were comparably elevated between groups (2,367 +/- 1,486 IU/liter for streptokinase vs 2,637 +/- 1,305 IU/liter for placebo), there was a significant reduction in NMR-measured AMI size in the streptokinase group (3 +/- 2% of left ventricular volume vs 10 +/- 4% in the placebo group, p less than 0.05). This occurred despite comparable resting (54 +/- 11 vs 47 +/- 10% and exercise (53 +/- 12 vs 49 +/- 11%) global ejection fractions. However, following nitroglycerin, there was an improvement in global ejection fraction in the streptokinase-treated group that was not observed with placebo (61 +/- 13 vs 48 +/- 10%, p less than 0.05). A similar pattern was also observed with regional functional analysis. Thus, streptokinase therapy leads to a significant reduction in NMR-measured AMI size and to a greater degree of reversible left ventricular dysfunction.
Journal of Personality | 2011
Lorne Campbell; Tara C. Marshall
Relationship processes in adult romantic relationships have been vastly studied under the aegis of attachment theory. Attachment theory is interactionist in nature, proposing that individual differences in levels of both attachment avoidance and anxiety predict an individuals thoughts, feelings, and behaviors in contexts that activate attachment concerns. A growing body of research is beginning to systematically test the conditions in which individual differences in attachment orientations both predict and fail to predict relationship processes. In this article, we focus on anxious attachment and review a program of research showing that the potentially destructive relationship processes typically observed in highly anxious individuals do not always appear in neutral or benign contexts, or when security needs are met. We argue that research needs to more thoroughly investigate the conditions that should, or should not, activate attachment concerns and thus result in links between individual differences in attachment orientations and relationship processes.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Robin Goodwin; Tara C. Marshall; Márta Fülöp; Joseph Adonu; Slawomir Spiewak; Félix Neto; Sonia Hernandez Plaza
This paper explores self-perceived mate value (SPMV), and its association with self-esteem, in eight cultures. 1066 participants, from 8 cultural groups in 7 countries, rated themselves on 24 SPMVs and completed a measure of self-esteem. Consistent with evolutionary theory, women were more likely to emphasise their caring and passionate romantic nature. In line with previous cross-cultural research, characteristics indicating passion and romance and social attractiveness were stressed more by respondents from individualistic cultures, and those higher on self-expression (rather than survival) values; characteristics indicative of maturity and confidence were more likely to be mentioned by those from Traditional, rather than Secular, cultures. Contrary to gender role theory, societal equality had only limited interactions with sex and SPMV, with honesty of greater significance for male self-esteem in societies with unequal gender roles. These results point to the importance of cultural and environmental factors in influencing self-perceived mate qualities, and are discussed in relation to broader debates about the impact of gender role equality on sex differences in personality and mating strategies.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2015
Laura Altweck; Tara C. Marshall; Nelli Ferenczi; Katharina Lefringhausen
Many families worldwide have at least one member with a behavioral or mental disorder, and yet the majority of the public fails to correctly recognize symptoms of mental illness. Previous research has found that Mental Health Literacy (MHL)—the knowledge and positive beliefs about mental disorders—tends to be higher in European and North American cultures, compared to Asian and African cultures. Nonetheless quantitative research examining the variables that explain this cultural difference remains limited. The purpose of our study was fourfold: (a) to validate measures of MHL cross-culturally, (b) to examine the MHL model quantitatively, (c) to investigate cultural differences in the MHL model, and (d) to examine collectivism as a predictor of MHL. We validated measures of MHL in European American and Indian samples. The results lend strong quantitative support to the MHL model. Recognition of symptoms of mental illness was a central variable: greater recognition predicted greater endorsement of social causes of mental illness and endorsement of professional help-seeking as well as lesser endorsement of lay help-seeking. The MHL model also showed an overwhelming cultural difference; namely, lay help-seeking beliefs played a central role in the Indian sample, and a negligible role in the European American sample. Further, collectivism was positively associated with causal beliefs of mental illness in the European American sample, and with lay help-seeking beliefs in the Indian sample. These findings demonstrate the importance of understanding cultural differences in beliefs about mental illness, particularly in relation to help-seeking beliefs.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Tara C. Marshall; Kathrine Bejanyan; Nelli Ferenczi
The purpose of this research was to examine the associations of attachment anxiety and avoidance with personal growth following relationship dissolution, and to test breakup distress, rumination, and tendency to rebound with new partners as mediators of these associations. Study 1 (N = 411) and Study 2 (N = 465) measured attachment style, breakup distress, and personal growth; Study 2 additionally measured ruminative reflection, brooding, and proclivity to rebound with new partners. Structural equation modelling revealed in both studies that anxiety was indirectly associated with greater personal growth through heightened breakup distress, whereas avoidance was indirectly associated with lower personal growth through inhibited breakup distress. Study 2 further showed that the positive association of breakup distress with personal growth was accounted for by enhanced reflection and brooding, and that anxious individuals’ greater personal growth was also explained by their proclivity to rebound. These findings suggest that anxious individuals’ hyperactivated breakup distress may act as a catalyst for personal growth by promoting the cognitive processing of breakup-related thoughts and emotions, whereas avoidant individuals’ deactivated distress may inhibit personal growth by suppressing this cognitive work.
Cross-Cultural Research | 2012
Geoff MacDonald; Tara C. Marshall; Judith Gere; Atsushi Shimotomai; July Lies
Research has suggested that individuals lower in self-esteem restrain from fully valuing romantic relationships because of relatively low confidence in positive regard from their partners (i.e., positive reflected appraisals). MacDonald and Jessica (2006) provided evidence that in Indonesia, where family plays an important role in mate selection, low self-esteem also leads to doubts regarding family approval of the relationship that, in turn, places an additional constraint on fully valuing a romantic relationship. In the current research, Study 1 replicated these findings, showing that the positive relationship between self-esteem and value placed on a romantic relationship was mediated by both reflected appraisals and approval from a partner’s family in Indonesia but only reflected appraisals in Canada. In Study 2, the relationship between self-esteem and relationship value was mediated by reflected appraisals and approval from own, but not partner’s, family in Japan whereas only reflected appraisals played a mediating role in Australia. These data suggest that in cultures involving family in mate selection, placing full value on romantic relationships may be contingent on confidence in both reflected appraisals and family approval of the relationship.
Archive | 2010
Tara C. Marshall
It is popularly believed, by researchers and laypersons alike, that men are from Mars and women are from Venus. When it comes to relationships, however, men and women are more similar than they are different (Burn, 1996; Hyde, 2005). Both sexes develop attachments to close others throughout the life span (Bowlby, 1980; Hazan & Shaver, 1987), and both are largely dependent on relationships for their psychological well-being (Berscheid & Reis, 1998). Nonetheless, researchers and the media tend to focus on gender differences, however small, at the expense of similarities.