Sentences with phrase «psychological maladjustment of»

Cumulative childhood trauma and psychological maladjustment of sexually abused children in Korea: Mediating effects of emotion regulation.

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Sinfulness, personal or corporate, is but a matter of maladjustment that can be cured through some minor psychological or sociological tinkering — I'm O.K. and you're O.K. and the Department of Health and Human Services will make our community a nice place to live.
However, he makes a mistake in framing the question of the psychological status of same - sex attraction in terms of its correlation with psychological adjustment or maladjustment.
society, where sin is viewed as little more than psychological maladjustment, or behavior arising out of corrupt economic structures, or as a failure of the educational system, baptism reminds us that, in spite of Gestalt and I'm OK, You're OK, what we do naturally is not the best we could do, that our inborn selfishness and pride are life - and - death matters, that Christians are made, not born.
In 1998, however, a meta - analysis in Psychological Bulletin found that most victims of pedophilia turned out only «slightly less well adjusted» than the average adult, with the probability of maladjustment being influenced by the degree of physical force or coercion present in pedophilic encounters.
The general conclusions of the psychological studies in the field of alcohol ism show that there can be little doubt that psychological maladjustment is an important part of the soil of addiction.
Fathers are cited more than mothers in issues such as psychological maladjustment, substance abuse, depression and behavioral problems, according to research done by Ronald Rohner, director of the Center for the Study of Parental Acceptance and Rejection in the School of Family Studies at the University of Connecticut, and his colleague Robert Veneziano.
Children of parents whom Kim classified as «tiger» had lower academic achievement and attainment — and greater psychological maladjustment — and family alienation, than the kids of parents characterized as «supportive» or «easygoing.»
Physical punishment is associated with a range of mental health problems in children, youth and adults, including depression, unhappiness, anxiety, feelings of hopelessness, use of drugs and alcohol, and general psychological maladjustment.26 — 29 These relationships may be mediated by disruptions in parent — child attachment resulting from pain inflicted by a caregiver, 30,31 by increased levels of cortisol32 or by chemical disruption of the brain's mechanism for regulating stress.33 Researchers are also finding that physical punishment is linked to slower cognitive development and adversely affects academic achievement.34 These findings come from large longitudinal studies that control for a wide range of potential confounders.35 Intriguing results are now emerging from neuroimaging studies, which suggest that physical punishment may reduce the volume of the brain's grey matter in areas associated with performance on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, third edition (WAIS - III).36 In addition, physical punishment can cause alterations in the dopaminergic regions associated with vulnerability to the abuse of drugs and alcohol.37
Adolescents who do not have close friendships and good social networks consistently report lower levels of self - esteem, more psychological symptoms of maladjustment, and are at higher risk of suicide.
Person - oriented analyses comparing children who were aggressive but had different relational risk / support histories (ARR group: higher ratio of relational stressors to supports; ARS group: higher ratio of supports to stressors) and children who were not at risk (RF group: risk free) revealed that only the ARR group showed significant increases in psychological and school maladjustment trajectories across the early grades.
Exemplary discoveries Our findings show that aggressive dispositions were moderately stable from kindergarten to grade 6 (e.g.,.56), whereas anxious - withdrawn behaviour was not stable until grades 2 -LRB-.36) and 3 -LRB-.51).3, 4 The percentages of children in a community sample (n = 2775) that could be classified into distinct risk groups were: 15 % aggressive; 12 % anxious - withdrawn, and 8.5 % aggressive - withdrawn (comorbid).5 Predictive analyses showed that aggressive children who exceeded a risk criterion in kindergarten exhibited increases in psychological and school maladjustment two years later.6 Anxious - withdrawn dispositions predicted early and later increases in internalizing problems.5 Overall, the findings corroborate the premise that aggression and anxious - withdrawal are risks for later maladjustment.
While divorce itself places children at risk for various psychological difficulties, research has shown that the strongest predictor of child maladjustment after divorce is exposure to high levels of inter-parental conflict, particularly when the conflict is hostile, aggressive, poorly resolved, and focused on issues pertaining to the children.
In other words, measures of psychological adjustment correlated positively with each other as did indicators of psychological maladjustment, and negative relationships appeared between these two types of variables.
At the same time, certain types of racial socialization messages may also generate an increased susceptibility to psychological maladjustment among African American adolescents.
TY - JOUR AU - 김소영 AU - Jinsook Kim TI - Development of Emotion Regulation Scale for Children T2 - Korea Journal of Counseling PY - 2011 VL - 12 IS - 4 PB - Korean Counseling Association (KCA) SP - 1097 - 1108 SN - 1598 - 2068 AB - The purpose of this study was to develop an Emotional Regulation Scale for Children in order to measure the degree of emotional regulation which is deemed to be related to main psychological causes of maladjustment behaviour (childhood's depression, aggression, etc.) and to verify the validity and reliability of the scale.
The purpose of this study was to develop an Emotional Regulation Scale for Children in order to measure the degree of emotional regulation which is deemed to be related to main psychological causes of maladjustment behaviour (childhood's depression, aggression, etc.) and to verify the validity and reliability of the scale.
TY - JOUR AU - 양영숙 AU - Kim Bong - Whan TI - Mediating Effects of Empathy and Forgiveness on the Relationship Between Marital Conflicts and Psychological Maladjustment T2 - Korea Journal of Counseling PY - 2009 VL - 10 IS - 2 PB - Korean Counseling Association (KCA) SP - 683 - 699 SN - 1598 - 2068 AB - This study was a basic research on availability of forgiveness to solve marital conflict between couples of Korea effectively.
«Mediating Effects of Empathy and Forgiveness on the Relationship Between Marital Conflicts and Psychological Maladjustment» Korea Journal of Counseling 10, no. 2 (2009): 683 - 699.
2009, «Mediating Effects of Empathy and Forgiveness on the Relationship Between Marital Conflicts and Psychological Maladjustment», Korea Journal of Counseling, vol.
@article -LCB- ART001352287 -RCB-, author ={ 양영숙 and Kim Bong - Whan -RCB-, title = -LCB- Mediating Effects of Empathy and Forgiveness on the Relationship Between Marital Conflicts and Psychological Maladjustment -RCB-, journal = -LCB- Korea Journal of Counseling -RCB-, issn = -LCB- 1598 - 2068 -RCB-, year = -LCB- 2009 -RCB-, volume = -LCB- 10 -RCB-, number = -LCB- 2 -RCB-, pages = -LCB- 683 - 699 -RCB-, doi = -LCB- 10.15703 / kjc.10.2.200906.683 -RCB-, url = -LCB- http://dx.doi.org/10.15703/kjc.10.2.200906.683 -RCB-
Mediating Effects of Empathy and Forgiveness on the Relationship Between Marital Conflicts and Psychological Maladjustment.
Pubertal transitions, perceptions of being overweight, and adolescents» psychological maladjustment: Gender and ethnic differences
Mediating Effects of Empathy and Forgiveness on the Relationship Between Marital Conflicts and Psychological Maladjustment Korea Journal of Counseling [Internet].
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