Meilleur, A., Cusson, N., Vallerand, R. J., Couture, M., Gilbert, E., Soulières, I. et Bussières, E.-L. (2024). Association between passion and optimal functioning in autistic individuals: The dualistic model of passion. Autism in Adulthood . ISSN 2573-9581 DOI 10.1089/aut.2024.0166
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Résumé
Abstract
Background:
Autistic individuals have intense interests in which they invest a significant amount of time and energy. Intense interests (i.e., passions) and their impact on optimal functioning were investigated for the first time using the Dualistic Model of Passion (DMP). The DMP posits that harmonious (HP) and obsessive passions (OP) can predict optimal functioning (well-being, contribution to society, and performance). Whereas HP is described as a balanced and flexible form of engagement toward a topic or an activity, OP is defined as a rigid form of engagement that negatively impacts optimal functioning.
Methods:
Autistic individuals aged 14?33 (n = 108) participated in an online quantitative study and completed self-report measures relating to their favorite interest of the moment (i.e., HP, OP, emotions, flow, conflict, rumination, and optimal functioning). Aims were to characterize passion and to determine whether HP and OP predicted emotions, flow, conflict, rumination, and optimal functioning. Descriptive analyses (means, standard deviations, and pairwise correlations) and a path analysis model were performed to answer these aims.
Results:
Results revealed that participants were highly passionate for their favorite interest, showing relatively high levels of HP and OP for activities such as video games, knowledge acquisition, and creative arts. Structural equation modeling showed that, as predicted by the DMP, HP was associated with positive emotions and flow. In turn, OP was positively associated with conflict, rumination, and negative emotions. Finally, HP and OP were positively and negatively associated with optimal functioning respectively.
Conclusion:
Findings suggest that intense interests can be defined as passion using the DMP. The DMP offers a theoretical framework that can account for the duality of intense interest and predict psychological and functional outcomes. Learning to foster higher levels of HP for intense interests can improve well-being and promote positive psychological experiences.
| Type de document: | Article |
|---|---|
| Mots-clés libres: | Autism spectrum disorder Medicine, Surgery & Diagnosis Mental disorders Nervous system diseases Neurodevelopmental disorders |
| Date de dépôt: | 02 déc. 2024 19:00 |
| Dernière modification: | 02 déc. 2024 19:00 |
| Version du document déposé: | Post-print (version corrigée et acceptée) |
| URI: | https://depot-e.uqtr.ca/id/eprint/11619 |
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