High scores on this scale are positively
correlated with resilience.
Not exact matches
The report comes from the Army Study to Assess Risk and
Resilience in Servicemembers (Army STARRS), a multicomponent epidemiological and neurobiological study of Army suicides and their
correlates sponsored by the U.S. Army and funded under a cooperative agreement
with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the National Institutes of Health and the National Institute of Mental Health (NIH / NIMH).
Personal best goals were
correlated with a range of positive variables at Time 1; however, at Time 2 the effects of personal best goals on deep learning, academic flow, and positive teacher relationship remained significant after controlling for prior variance of corresponding Time 1 factors, suggesting that students
with personal best goals show sustained
resilience in academic and social development.
Analysis revealed that positive emotions significantly
correlate with higher level of
resilience and better psychosomatic health, while negative emotions
correlate with lower level of
resilience and poor psychosomatic health.
Furthermore,
resilience strongly
correlates with better psychosomatic health.
The PR6 was found to have good internal consistency and
correlate with other measures of
resilience as well as health hygiene scores.
All measures of spirituality
correlated significantly and positively
with resilience.
Additionally, the RS
correlates highly
with outcomes of
resilience.
Siegel presents extensive neuroscientific evidence that these behaviors are
correlated with both the development and
resilience of the brains and nervous systems of people in secure attachment.