Thriving under challenges – establishing individual and situational influences on eustress

Kloidt, Juliane (2026) Thriving under challenges – establishing individual and situational influences on eustress. PhD thesis, University of Glasgow.

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Abstract

Across four projects, I aimed to develop an in-depth understanding of how individuals experience eustress–the positive experience of a challenging situation. Specifically, I aimed to understand how eustress manifests in UK adults in general and in specific real-life situations. In Project 1, I performed a scoping review and deductive theory building to integrate 57 unique features of eustress from 80 articles into a Comprehensive Hierarchical construct of Eustress (CHE). According to CHE, eustress emerges from three main sources: successful goal-directed action, fulfilling momentary experiences, and positive stable qualities of the individual. In Project 2, I developed and assessed a novel eustress instrument, the Comprehensive Hierarchical Eustress Review (CHER), reflecting CHE’s content and structure. In a quantitative study (N = 260), I found that the CHE model adequately described eustress in UK adults and provided insights into its relationships with distress and wellbeing. In Project 3, I established feature profiles of 20 difficult situations that likely induce eustress. I found that as UK adults (N = 81) judged a situation as increasingly threatening and challenging, they also judged it as more difficult and effortful with a less obvious solution and less effective coping. I found that a large language model could approximate general trends in human judgments but failed to reproduce meaningful relationships in the data. In Project 4, I combined insights from the previous projects to establish predictive profiles of eustress and explored how these profiles varied across individuals and real-life situations. In a quantitative survey (N = 251), I found that eustress emerges from individual-situation interactions, is predicted by the underlying processes of the CHE model and is weakly related to adaptive stress mindsets. I discuss the implications of my research regarding eustress theory development and measurement, as well as applied implications, limitations, and future directions for eustress research. By establishing a comprehensive construct of eustress and testing it across individuals and situations, this thesis may help formalize the small but growing research field on positive stress. Eustress is a complex behavior that is shaped by individual (e.g., fulfilment coping) and situational (e.g., intrinsic difficulty) processes as well as their interactions. I suggest that this research can be used to establish who experiences eustress under what circumstances, and what strategies are most effective in fostering positive stress where desirable and applicable.

Item Type: Thesis (PhD)
Qualification Level: Doctoral
Subjects: B Philosophy. Psychology. Religion > BF Psychology
Colleges/Schools: College of Science and Engineering > School of Psychology
Funder's Name: UKRI Centre for Doctoral Training in Socially Intelligent Artificial Agents
Supervisor's Name: Barsalou, Professor Lawrence W.
Date of Award: 2026
Depositing User: Theses Team
Unique ID: glathesis:2026-85846
Copyright: Copyright of this thesis is held by the author.
Date Deposited: 30 Mar 2026 11:58
Last Modified: 30 Mar 2026 14:04
Thesis DOI: 10.5525/gla.thesis.85846
URI: https://theses.gla.ac.uk/id/eprint/85846
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