Sentences with phrase «other psychological constructs»

In these analyses, other psychological constructs were entered on step 1, while psychological inflexibility (AFQ - Y) was added to the equation on step 2 to investigate its unique predictive value of psychopathological symptoms.
There are several theoretical perspectives on personality in psychology, which involve different ideas about the relationship between personality and other psychological constructs, as well as different theories about the way personality develops.

Not exact matches

From the recent «Brexit» to Donald Trump's plans for a border wall, from the ongoing refugee crisis to debates over «safe spaces», we invite artists and others to discuss the geographic, social and psychological borders that we construct and fight to break down.
Hapless, Helpless and Hopeless is a video by Rob Kennedy and Peter Dowling produced entirely of sampled television advertisements that attempts to adapt and re-define the codes at work in these sales pitches, building a «grammar» that can be used to suggest other readings, other outcomes, other problems, than those nominally prescribed in the role of the advertisement, This is not in some vain attempt at trying to negate the power of these adverts, but in order to construct a constantly shifting series of relationships that mines the psychological, emotional and semiotic power of these highly produced images and sounds.
A daily series of lunchtime discussions will focus this years» attention on «Borderlands», inviting artists such as Hannah Black, Fatima Al Qadiri, Alexandra Bachzetsis, Josh Kline, Jill Magid and Lauren Cornell among others to discuss «the geographic, social and psychological borders that we construct and fight to break down.»
That said, research shows that while codependency does overlap with other personality disorders, it does appear to constitute a distinct psychological construct.
Several researches investigated the relationship between the affective profiles and different psychological constructs (e.g., life satisfaction, psychological well - being, optimism, locus of control) and suggested that individuals with self - fulfilling profile were more satisfied, optimistic, and autonomous than the others (Garcia & Siddiqui, 2009; Garcia, 2012), also revealing higher levels of psychological well - being, self - esteem and internal locus of control than individuals with self - destructive profile (Archer et al., 2008).
Factor analyses support the three - factor structure and studies with other style and psychological variables demonstrate the construct validity of VIEW (Burger, Marino, Ponterotto, & Houtz, 2008; Houtz, 2002; Houtz, Matos, Park, Scheinholtz, & Selby, 2007; Houtz & Selby, 2009; Houtz, Selby, Esquivel, Okoye, Peters, & Treffinger, 2003a, 2003b; Shaw, Selby, & Houtz, 2009).
In general, the VAWI model was not replicated by PCA in the three - component model and other constructs were found which reflected more the severity rather than the types (psychological, physical and sexual) of violence.
Increasingly, counselors and researchers are incorporating behavior modification techniques with other approaches (eclectic or multimodal approaches), and develop behavioral definitions to measure psychological constructs such as depression, anxiety or anger (Thompson, Rudolph, & Henderson, 2004).
Evidence of construct validity in relation to other measures from the psychological flexibility model was observed as well as evidence of clinical utility in relation to measures of pain - related functioning.
Convergent validity results further suggest the MCC's distinctiveness regarding other measures of commitment, by showing personal, but not moral or structural, commitment, to correlate with the Investment Model Scale (Rusbult et al. in Personal Relationships 5:357 — 387, 1998), defining commitment as a unitary construct pertaining a general long - term orientation and intent to persist in the relationship, and psychological attachment towards the partner.
From the other side, movement toward synthesis represents the acknowledgement that an attachment - based model for the construct of parental alienation represents an accurate description of the clinical phenomenon and warrants a DSM - 5 diagnosis of V995.51 Child Psychological Abuse, Confirmed when the three diagnostic indicators of attachment - based «parental alienation» are present.
Since the constructs of narcissistic and borderline personality disorders and cross-generational coalitions of the child with one parent against the other parent are established psychological constructs about which ALL mental health professionals working with children and families should be familiar, for ANY mental health therapist or child custody evaluator to miss making the diagnosis of the child's cross-generational coalition involving a narcissistic / (borderline) parent that is targeted against a normal - range and affectionally available parent is simply unacceptable and represents professional incompetence.
The primary constructs within the hypothesized framework are: (1) social position variables — characteristics that are used within societies to hierarchically stratify groups (race, gender, socioeconomic status); (2) parenting variables — familial mechanisms that may influence African American adolescents well - being, perceptions of competence, and attitudes towards others in various contexts (e.g., parenting practices and racial socialization messages); (3) racial discrimination — negative racially driven experiences that may influence feelings of competence, belongingness, and self - worth; (4) environmental / contextual factors — settings and surroundings that may impede or promote healthy identity development (e.g., academic settings); and (5) learner characteristics — individual characteristics that may promote or hinder positive psychological adjustment outcomes (e.g., racial identity, coping styles).
Here, we aimed to replicate and extend those initial studies by examining the factor structure, construct validity, and treatment sensitivity of the NSPS in samples of community - based participants with a principal diagnosis of social anxiety disorder (SAD), a principal anxiety disorder diagnosis other than SAD, or no history of psychological problems.
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