Psychology
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This page shows you the most recent publications within this specialty of the MedWorm directory. This is page number 6.
Commentary: Recalling as a Holistic Experience: Objects, Emotions and Meanings United
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Reavey and Brown (2009), in their article ‘The Mediating Role of Objects in Recollections of Adult Women Survivors of Child Sexual Abuse’, make an interesting review of recollections of child abuse episodes in four women. They intend to give an account, in terms of agency, responsibility and integrity, of reports of past traumatic experiences in which particular objects are considered. The mediation of objects in recollection of past memories is discussed as a relevant contribution, positioning objects as semiotic resources for the apprehension of idiosyncratic experiences and personal sense-making. It is state...
Source: Culture - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: del Rio, M. T., Molina, M. E. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
Commentary: Discrepancies Drive Remembering and Show the Particularity of an Individual: A Commentary on Reavey & Brown
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Remembering is driven by discrepancies (interdependencies) resulting from contradiction and develops toward resolution (stabilization) of them. Reavey and Brown (2009) depict female survivors of child sexual abuse who struggle to stabilize their recollections. By using a mediating network including physical objects, they reduce the indeterminacy of meanings of actions and events and attempt to properly construct identity and agency of participants of abuse including them. The present study of Reavey and Brown has the potential to explore the particularity of an individual. The author and colleagues have concerned themselve...
Source: Culture - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Mori, N. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
Agency and Power of Single Children in Multi-Generational Families in Urban Xiamen, China
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This paper examines ethnographic data collected over six months from Xiamen, China, on children as active agents in their relationships with their parents and grandparents. It explicates the usefulness of the conceptual tools of ‘agency’ and ‘interdependent power’ derived from social relational theory in demonstrating the bilateral influences between children, grandparents and parents. Ways in which children’s agency is enhanced in their interactions with the adult caregivers are explicated. It provides a reinterpretation of the ‘little emperor’ syndrome in contemporary urban China.
Source: Culture - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Goh, E. C.L., Kuczynski, L. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
Commentary: Forms of Relationship Construction and the Power of the Child
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The work by Goh and Kuczynski (2009) is important beyond the specific context of China. Using social relational theory, the authors examine family dynamics in the contemporary nursing practices of five families in Xiamen, China. While they succeed in identifying relations and patterns of interaction, they do not explain the mechanism that enables the emergence of these patterns. In this article, I suggest a complementary way, which does not exclude theirs, to show how developments and concepts derived from general systems theory and from the general perspective of dynamic systems could contribute to understanding the relat...
Source: Culture - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Rodriguez, L. P. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
Life Course Staging as Cultural and Subjective Practice: Review, Critique, and Theoretical Possibilities
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This paper identifies and critically assesses various research approaches to subjective and cultural-historical notions of life stages through the lens of comparative-cultural, psychometric, discursive psychological and ethnographic perspectives. Included is an overview of 48 studies of subjective attributions of life stages (1984—2007) covering 14 national settings, with a discussion of their limitations. Possibilities for cross-fertilizing critical gender theory with life stage theory are briefly discussed. It is suggested that analytic notions of citationality and hegemony, both pioneered in the context of gender ...
Source: Culture - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Janssen, D. F. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
Commentary: About the Danger of Relying on Common Vocabulary
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Janssen (2009) raises the criticism that life stages and related concepts are not clearly defined and that even within the same study or data pool different conceptualizations can be found. A lack of clear definitions and the resulting difficulties are, nevertheless, not exclusive to life stage research. The general need for unambiguous definitions of the terminology used, even if these limit broader concepts to a certain scope of meaning, is stressed in order to avoid misunderstandings and to foster— especially interdisciplinary— communication.
Source: Culture - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Watzlawik, M. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
Review Essay: Rituals and Knowledge Construction: Ethical Dilemmas on Creating Oppositions
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What is knowledge construction for? Mesopotamian rituals were practiced in order to grasp the future and guide war strategies. Nowadays, scientific rules are developed to avoid mysticism—constructing more accurate laws to explain the reality. Both rituals and science were, and usually are, grounded in a conception that to know is to decipher the correct meaning behind the expressive relief of the world. Contemporary studies on anthropology have shown that the opposition between nature and culture is the basis of a number of problems in human sciences aiming to comprehend the intricate relation between body and violen...
Source: Culture - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Silva Guimaraes, D. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
Examining Evidence for Autonomy and Relatedness in Urban Inuit Parenting
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Inuit have experienced significant lifestyle changes in the past 50 years. Most recently, urbanization has resulted in greater numbers of Inuit living in urban centres in southern Canada. Little is known about Inuit parenting, and nothing has been published on Inuit parenting in an urban context. The present study sought to address this gap by describing the parenting of Inuit living in a large Canadian city and examining emergent themes for evidence of autonomy and relatedness. In partnership with the Tungasuvvingat Inuit Family Resource Centre, 39 Inuit parents completed an interview about their parenting experiences. Ba...
Source: Culture - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: McShane, K. E., Hastings, P. D., Smylie, J. K., Prince, C., The Tungasuvvingat Inuit Family Resource Centre Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
The Minimalist Self: The Japanese Experience
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In this continuing series on sense of self, Sarah Luczaj explores a piece of research comparing the well-being of Japanese and North American students, drawing conclusions about the roles of gratitude and peaceful disengagement.Tags: independence, mindful awareness, news and research, relationships, series on sense of self, society
Source: CounsellingResource.com News and Features - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Sarah Luczaj Tags: General independence mindful awareness news and research relationships series on sense of self society Source Type: news
Woo Me With Your Words
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It's all in how you say it.
Source: Psychology Today - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Ilana Simons, Ph.D. Tags: Social Life Word Watch Source Type: consumer
Languages Are Vanishing
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Is there a problem?
Source: Psychology Today - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Roy F. Baumeister Tags: Evolutionary Psychology Word Watch Source Type: consumer
Fuggedaboutit—Alpha Male Linguistics
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Posturing dominance through words.
Source: Psychology Today - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Conrad McCallum Tags: Gender Word Watch Source Type: consumer
A Funny Little Poem
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And a symptom of intelligence and creativity.
Source: Psychology Today - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Mark Peters Tags: Creativity Word Watch Source Type: consumer
Who is the Most Violent Person in Your Family?
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You may be surprised.Last week twenty-year-old Jim told his mother that he has always been leery of his younger, but larger brother, Andrew. Jim's cautiousness around Andrew dates back to the time Andrew shoved him off a dump truck breaking both of Jim's wrists. The boys were six and five-years-old. The brothers have rarely seen eye-to-eye and as young adults tolerate each other, are cordial, but nothing more. Their mother had hoped they would be best friends at this point in their lives.The story was related to me by the boys' mother who is upset by her sons' current relationship, but understands it better after Jim's exp...
Source: Psychology Today Personality Center - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Susan Newman, Ph.D. Tags: Anxiety Behavioral Economics Child Development Evolutionary Psychology Happiness Parenting Personality Psychiatry Relationships Resilience Self-Help Stress abuse best friends brother andrew brothers brothers and sisters c Source Type: consumer
Do You Grab Life by the Horns or Sit on the Sidelines?
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"The only things in this life that you really regret are the risks you didn't take. And God knows if you see a chance to be happy, you grab it with both hands and to hell with the consequences."--Grumpy Old MenI couldn't have said it any better. I hope I don't have to wait until I'm a fictional grumpy old man to realize this! Sure, life aint easy. But amid all the zings and zaps are quite a few tasty morsels. And if you aren't open to them, they will pass you by. Which type of person are you? Do you grab life by the balls (intriguing mental image, I admit) or tie yourself to the mast? As it turns out, this isn't such a sil...
Source: Psychology Today Personality Center - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Scott Barry Kaufman, Ph.D. Tags: Personality agreeableness big-five colin deyoung conscientiousness dimensions of personality emotional stability grumpy old man Individual differences intellect jacob b. hirsh jacob hirsch meni mental image meta-traits neurom Source Type: consumer
Hedonism (Sensuality) Doesn't Exist
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Some psychologists have talked about pleasure seeking or hedonism as a personality trait. I believe, however, that the construct of 'pleasure seeking' is invalid. Nobody seeks sensual pleasure. Here's why.
The phenomenon of satiation disproves the construct of hedonism (sensuality). Suppose, for example, that a theorist defined sensuality to include pleasure from eating and sex. Such a construct implies that the need for eating can be satiated by sexual activity and vice versa. Since this is obviously invalid, the construct of sensuality is invalid.
When a person seeks sensual pleasures, he or she is motivated by separate ...
Source: Psychology Today Personality Center - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Steven Reiss, Ph.D. Tags: Personality antecedent variables antecedents antiquity avoidance constructs experience pleasure hedonism logical error personality theory personality trait physical activity pleasure sex psychologists satiation sensual pleasu Source Type: consumer
Displays that facilitate performance of multifrequency ratios during motor-respiratory coordination.
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A large number of ratios between movement and breathing are possible, but only a small number have been performed during exercise. The purpose of this study was twofold: (1) to investigate displays that might facilitate the performance of other ratios; and (2) to test predictions from the sine circle map and continued fractions in a model motor-respiratory task in which participants coordinated arm movement and breathing. Displays consisted of either real-time feedback or a template (non-feedback). The accuracy of ratio performance was significantly greater with the template in which the number and relative positioning...
Source: Acta Psychologica - November 16, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Hessler EE, Gonzales LM, Amazeen PG Tags: Acta Psychol (Amst) Source Type: journals
Enjoying Your Emotions
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Emotions have a bad rep these days. Especially in medical research, emotions are usually the enemies. This orientation is understandable with respect to rage, but laughing and crying also are treated as pathological. There are many studies of a new diagnosis called Emotional Lability (EL) and the even more extreme one, Emotional Incontinence (EI). "For Heaven's sake, stop crying: you are making a mess all over my new tablecloth."
It seems to have occurred to only a few researchers that the absence of emotional expression might be a far wider problem, and possibly a much more damaging one. There is only one diagnosis that h...
Source: Psychology Today Personality Center - November 15, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Thomas Scheff, Ph.D. Tags: Anxiety Child Development Happiness Health Personality Psychiatry Relationships Self-Help ancient theory anger catharsis crying diagnosis emotional expression enemies fear grief horror movies medical research muscles Source Type: consumer
The Four Moral Emotions: Guilt, Shame, Embarrassment, and Pride
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In my last post, I wrote about the evolutionary value of emotions. One reason emotions are useful is that they get us to react quickly in response to danger. Although our rational (as opposed to emotional) minds do a lot to keep us at the top of the food chain, rational thinking is sometimes too slow for handling a threat (e.g. fighting a tiger). Sometimes, we need to react more quickly--and our emotions, like fear and surprise, help us do that.
But of course supplying speedy reactions to tigers is not the only use of emotion. In this light, recent research on emotion has focused not just on issues of an individual's self-...
Source: Psychology Today Personality Center - November 15, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Ilana Simons, Ph.D. Tags: Animal Behavior Anxiety Evolutionary Psychology Happiness Neuroscience Personality Relationships Social Life basic emotion basic emotions better chance bump cultures Debra Mashek disgust Extinction heartbeat ilana simons Source Type: consumer
The Four Moral Emotions
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In my last post, I wrote about the evolutionary value of emotions. One reason emotions are useful is that they get us to react quickly in response to danger. Although our rational (as opposed to emotional) minds do a lot to keep us at the top of the food chain, rational thinking is sometimes too slow for handling a threat (e.g. fighting a tiger). Sometimes, we need to react more quickly--and our emotions, like fear and surprise, help us do that. But of course supplying speedy reactions to tigers is not the only use of emotion. In this light, recent research on emotion has focused not just on issues of an individual's self-...
Source: Psychology Today Personality Center - November 15, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Ilana Simons, Ph.D. Tags: Evolutionary Psychology Morality Personality basic emotion basic emotions better chance bump cultures Debra Mashek disgust Extinction heartbeat ilana simons Jeffrey Stuewig Jessica Tracy June Price Tangney landlord litera Source Type: consumer
Libel in Fact: Aspiring to Rational Judgments Using DSM-I
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A 1964 poll Fact magazine invited members of the American Psychiatric Association to comment on then-Senator Barry Goldwater's personality. Last week, I continued my examination of the results of the poll, particularly focusing on the difference between, intuitive, automatic-seeming perceptions of personality versus logical, analytical reactions (see here).An example of a likely intuitive reaction was a respondent's comment regarding the Senator: "He frightens the hell out of me."In contrast to such intuitive reactions, diagnostic evaluations of Senator Goldwater ought to be more logical and analytical. Psychiatrists are t...
Source: Psychology Today Personality Center - November 15, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: John D. Mayer, Ph.D. Tags: Personality American Psychiatric Association checklists delusions hallucinations diagnostic and statistical manual diagnostic evaluations disorganized speech dsm iii dsm iv tr fact magazine impressions manifestations mental disorde Source Type: consumer
Fair Play
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Recently, while finishing up delivering a talk in Silicon Valley, I found myself struck by a deep sense of dread. I hadn't brought enough copies of hand out materials for the unexpectedly large group. This meant that at any moment a small mob of otherwise friendly people might turn against me, driven to expressing mild rage from a sense of unfairness. It was enough to put me on edge for some time until I labeled what was going on.Fairness is the fifth and final domain of threat or reward I have written up in a series of posts, the others being Status, Certainty, Autonomy and Relatedness. These five ideas together make up t...
Source: Psychology Today Work Center - November 15, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: David Rock Tags: Neuroscience Social Life Work autonomy being ethical deep sense dread enormous sums ethics fair fair play fairness fairness issues injustice large group mundane situations pain and pleasure political clashes relatedness Source Type: consumer
How Much Should One Spend on An Engagement Ring?
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A common norm regarding how much a man should spend on an engagement ring is three months of his annual salary. One reason for placing such a heavy financial burden on this particular courtship ritual is that it serves as an honest signal of a man's commitment to his prospective wife. In other words, pretenders need not apply.Clearly though, in the same way that people do not always leave 15% of their bill as a tip (even though this is the norm) but rather adjust it up or down as a function of other factors (e.g., service quality), one would expect that the price paid for an engagement ring might too be linked to several e...
Source: Psychology Today Relationships Center - November 15, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Gad Saad, Ph.D. Tags: Evolutionary Psychology Gender Relationships Sex annual salary average incomes bria bridewealth cost of ring courtship ritual descriptive statistics engagement rings exact issue extraneous variables g service lee cronk marr Source Type: consumer
Emotion and the Law
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Psychological Perspectives series: Nebraska Symposium on Motivation From questions surrounding motives to the concept of crimes of passion, the intersection of emotional states and legal practice has long interested professionals as well as the public—recent cases involving extensive pretrial publicity, highly charged evidence, and instances of jury nullification continue to make the subject particularly timely. With these trends in mind, Emotion ...
Source: Springer Psychology titles - November 15, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Tags: Personality and Social Psychology Source Type: organizations
10 Habits of Happy Couples
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What does it take to be happy in a relationship? If you’re working to improve your marriage, here are the 10 habits of happy couples.1. Go to bed at the same time Remember the beginning of your relationship, when you couldn’t wait to go to bed with each other to make love? Happy couples resist the temptation to go to bed at different times. They go to bed at the same time, even if one partner wakes up later to do things while their partner sleeps.<!--more--> 2. Cultivate common interests After the passion settles down, it’s common to realize that you have few interests in common. But don’t minimize the import...
Source: Psychology Today Relationships Center - November 15, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Dr. Mark Goulston Tags: Relationships anonymity common interests couples default mode different times disagreement Forgiveness happy couples love mark goulston marriage marriage advice mate Memory passion spirit temptation Source Type: consumer
A Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the California Verbal Learning Test--Second Edition (CVLT-II) in a Traumatic Brain Injury Sample
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The latent structure of the California Verbal Learning Test—Second Edition (CVLT-II) was examined in a clinical sample of 223 persons with traumatic brain injury that had been screened to remove individuals with complicating premorbid (e.g., psychiatric) or comorbid (e.g., financial compensation seeking) histories. Analyses incorporated the z scores from 12 CVLT-II variables. Maximum-likelihood confirmatory analyses were performed to test the fit and parsimony of four hypothetical models. A four-factor model, consisting of Attention Span, Learning Efficiency, Delayed Memory, and Inaccurate Memory, met all the a prior...
Source: Assessment - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: DeJong, J., Donders, J. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
A Psychometric Examination of Multidimensional Inventory of Black Identity (MIBI) Scores
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The factor structure of the Multidimensional Inventory of Black Identity (MIBI) was assessed in a sample of 272 African American college students using confirmatory and exploratory factor analyses. The fit indices from the confirmatory analyses did not support the seven-factor first-order model or two alternative higher-order models suggested by the developers, but yielded numerous recommendations for modifications. A post hoc exploratory factor analysis indicated that MIBI items were best represented by a five-factor structure.
Source: Assessment - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Vandiver, B. J., Worrell, F. C., Delgado-Romero, E. A. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
A Brief Assessment of the Interpersonal Circumplex: The IPIP-IPC
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Three studies are presented that demonstrate the psychometric properties and initial validation of the International Personality Item Pool—Interpersonal Circumplex (IPIP-IPC). The IPIP-IPC is a brief 32-item assessment of the interpersonal cirucmplex designed to be used when time is limited or when participants have difficulty understanding the adjective items used in more traditional assessments of the interpersonal circumplex. In Study 1, 501 participants were examined to develop the IPIP-IPC and demonstrate the circular structure of the IPIP-IPC scales and their relation to the five-factor model of personality. St...
Source: Assessment - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Markey, P. M., Markey, C. N. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
Contemplating the Presence of Third Party Observers and Facilitators in Psychological Evaluations
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Significant controversy surrounds how psychologists should balance competing interests when considering whether and under what conditions third parties should be permitted to be present during psychological evaluations. This is especially true in forensic contexts where much is often at stake for those being assessed. Unfortunately, existing professional statements on this issue provide limited guidance to practitioners on how to think about this issue. In this article, the authors (a) distinguish between different types of third party participants, (b) highlight the competing interests that underlie third party presence d...
Source: Assessment - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Otto, R. K., Krauss, D. A. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
An Item-Level Psychometric Analysis of the Personality Assessment Inventory: Clinical Scales in a Psychiatric Inpatient Unit
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Multi-item multiscale self-report measures are increasingly used in inpatient assessments. When considering a measure for this setting, it is important to evaluate the psychometric properties of the clinical scales and items to ensure that they are functioning as intended in a highly distressed clinical population. The present study examines scale properties for a self-report measure frequently employed in inpatient assessments, the Personality Assessment Inventory (PAI). In addition to examining internal consistency statistics, this study extends prior PAI research by considering key issues related to inpatient assessment...
Source: Assessment - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Siefert, C. J., Sinclair, S. J., Kehl-Fie, K. A., Blais, M. A. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
A Review of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory--Adolescent (MMPI-A) and the Millon Adolescent Clinical Inventory (MACI) With an Emphasis on Juvenile Justice Samples
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The Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory—Adolescent (MMPI-A) and Millon Adolescent Clinical Inventory (MACI) are frequently used objective personality self-report measures. Given their widespread use, the purpose of the current study was to examine and compare the literature base for the two instruments. A comprehensive review of the literature was conducted between the years 1992 and 2007 using the PsycINFO Database. Results indicate the publication of 277 articles, books, book chapters, monographs, and dissertation abstracts on the MMPI-A. This was compared with the results of a comparable search for the MAC...
Source: Assessment - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Baum, L. J., Archer, R. P., Forbey, J. D., Handel, R. W. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
The Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale--III and Malingering in Traumatic Brain Injury: Classification Accuracy in Known Groups
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A known-groups design was used to determine the classification accuracy of Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale—III (WAIS-III) variables in detecting malingered neurocognitive dysfunction (MND) in traumatic brain injury (TBI). TBI patients were classified into the following groups: (a) mild TBI not-MND (n = 26), (b) mild TBI MND (n = 31), and (c) moderate/severe (M/S) TBI not-MND (n = 26). A sample of 80 general clinical patients was used for comparison. Verbal IQ, Verbal Comprehension Index, and Working Memory Index detected approximately 25% of malingerers with a false positive (FP) error rate of approximately 5% in t...
Source: Assessment - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Curtis, K. L., Greve, K. W., Bianchini, K. J. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
Sex Differences in Sum Scores May Be Hard to Interpret: The Importance of Measurement Invariance
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In most assessment instruments, distinct items are designed to measure a trait, and the sum score of these items serves as an approximation of an individual’s trait score. In interpreting group differences with respect to sum scores, the instrument should measure the same underlying trait across groups (e.g., male/female, young/old). Differences with respect to the sum score should accurately reflect differences in the latent trait of interest. A necessary condition for this is that the instrument is measurement invariant. In the current study, the authors illustrate a stepwise approach for testing measurement invari...
Source: Assessment - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Slof-Op 't Landt, M.C.T., van Furth, E.F., Rebollo-Mesa, I., Bartels, M., van Beijsterveldt, C.E.M., Slagboom, P.E., Boomsma, D.I., Meulenbelt, I., Dolan, C.V. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
Brooding and Pondering: Isolating the Active Ingredients of Depressive Rumination With Exploratory Factor Analysis and Structural Equation Modeling
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Depressive rumination, as assessed by Nolen-Hoeksema’s Response Styles Questionnaire (RSQ), predicts the onset, chronicity, and duration of depressed mood. However, some RSQ items contain depressive content and result in a heterogeneous factor structure. After the a priori elimination of items potentially confounded with depressed item content, Treynor, Gonzalez, and Nolen-Hoeksema identified two factors within the remaining RSQ rumination sub-scale that were differentially related to depression: brooding and pondering. However, Treynor et al. used a nonstandard form and administration of the RSQ. The present study s...
Source: Assessment - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Armey, M. F., Fresco, D. M., Moore, M. T., Mennin, D. S., Turk, C. L., Heimberg, R. G., Kecmanovic, J., Alloy, L. B. Tags: Articles Source Type: journals
Celia Brickman: Aboriginal Populations in the Mind: Race and Primitivity in Psychoanalysis
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Content Type Journal ArticleCategory Book ReviewDOI 10.1007/s10615-009-0242-0Authors
Elizabeth Kita, Smith College Northampton MA UK
Journal Clinical Social Work JournalOnline ISSN 1573-3343Print ISSN 0091-1674
Source: Clinical Social Work Journal - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Tags: Clinical Social Work Journal Source Type: journals
Bright-Sided
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The positive thinking movement -- panacea or national addiction?
Source: Psychology Today - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Lynn Phillips Tags: Happiness The Positivity Debate Source Type: consumer
Is Positive Psychology For Everyone?
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New research raises doubts.
Source: Psychology Today - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Scott Lilienfeld Tags: Therapy The Positivity Debate Source Type: consumer
Bad Moods Can Be Good For You
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Some tasks are hindered by happiness.
Source: Psychology Today - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Joseph Cardillo Tags: Resilience The Positivity Debate Source Type: consumer
Give Negative Emotions a Place at the Table
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Honor all your feelings or risk the consequences.
Source: Psychology Today - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Jenna Baddeley Tags: Therapy The Positivity Debate Source Type: consumer
How Saying No to Sex Can Help You Learn to Love It Again
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People often ask me to tell them one single thing they can do that will change their sex life for the better. My often surprising response? Say no to sex. That’s right: I firmly believe that the occasional, well-delivered "no" can make for more loving, pleasurable, mindful sex – a topic I spent a good amount of ink writing about in my book, Because It Feels Good: A Woman’s Guide to Sexual Pleasure and Satisfaction, and an idea that has resonated with many women and men I speak with at book clubs, parties, conferences and events. So how does this work? We know from research studies that both women and men – but...
Source: Psychology Today Relationships Center - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Debby Herbenick, Ph.D., M.P.H. Tags: Relationships Sex bad sex book clubs conferences conflict dread feelings of guilt few minutes having sex love satisfaction sex life sex partner sexual desire sexual pleasure single thing sleep story time unloved wom Source Type: consumer
Measuring Level of Deviance: Considering the Distinct Influence of Goals and Tactics on News Treatment of Abortion Protests
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Source: Atlantic Journal of Communication - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Boyle, Michael P.Armstrong, Cory L. Source Type: journals
News Coverage of the Failed Plensa Project: How Framing Affected the Diffusion of Public Art
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Source: Atlantic Journal of Communication - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Johnson, Melissa A.Kim, Daniel H. Source Type: journals
Humor Complexity and Political Influence: An Elaboration Likelihood Approach to the Effects of Humor Type in The Daily Show with Jon Stewart
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Source: Atlantic Journal of Communication - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Polk, JeremyYoung, Dannagal G.Holbert, R. Lance Source Type: journals
Dialogic Public Relations and Resource Dependency: New Jersey Community Colleges as Models for Web Site Effectiveness
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Source: Atlantic Journal of Communication - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: McAllister-Spooner, Sheila M.Kent, Michael L. Source Type: journals
Reducing Inequalities May Increase Envy
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"Where there is no comparison, no envy; and therefore kings are not envied but by kings." Francis Bacon
"Some men must follow, and some command, though all are made of clay." Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
It is often assumed that a reduction in inequality would lead to a drop in the level of envy. I believe that this assumption is incorrect and that, on the contrary, when inequalities are decreased the level of envy increases.
It would appear that the desire to eliminate inequality, that is, our inferior position, is an important component of envy. In consequence two different claims have been raised regarding the envy-inequa...
Source: Psychology Today Relationships Center - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Aaron Ben-Zeév, Ph.D. Tags: Philosophy Relationships assumption central concern clay henry contrary desert desire egalitarianism emotions envious people envy equality francis bacon henry wadsworth longfellow inequalities inequality inferior position Source Type: consumer
What can psychology contribute to our work lives?
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I am delighted to enter this world of blogging; I hope that my passion for the psychological exploration of working is intriguing to some of you and, ideally, helpful. In this blog, I will introduce some of my ideas and relate them to the challenges that individuals face in the world of work and to the challenges faced by employers and organizations.I have recently written a book entitled "The Psychology of Working" that has presented my thinking about work. Over the course of the next few entries, I will outline my perspective with a focus on various issues that all of us face. For now, I want to respond to the question t...
Source: Psychology Today Work Center - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: David L. Blustein, Ph.D. Tags: Work blog blogging bottom line challenges crying wolf decades economists insecurity passion perspective proposal psychological exploration psychology recession self determination significant improvements survival unempl Source Type: consumer
Are antidepressants just a crutch?
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Recently I evaluated a new patient, a young woman who wondered whether medication might ease her depression. She was in therapy elsewhere, and although seeing me was her idea, she was apprehensive about adding an antidepressant. I did end up recommending one, at which point she asked: "Aren't antidepressants just a crutch?"<!--break-->I relish this question. It is asked in anxiety, hesitation, and doubt, yet carries within it its own hopeful answer."Why yes," I answered with a smile. "Antidepressants are exactly that, just a crutch." I pointed out that antidepressants, and all psychiatric medications, are symptomatic...
Source: Psychology Today Depression Center - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Steven Reidbord, MD Tags: Depression Psychiatry antidepressant antidepressants bad genes crutch crutches definitive treatment depressive symptoms exact nature family dynamics foot infection fractured leg genetic vulnerabilities hesitation leg bone m Source Type: consumer
Relations of proactive and reactive dimensions of aggression to overt and covert narcissism in nonclinical adolescents
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In this study, the relations of proactive and reactive aggression with overt and covert manifestations of narcissism were examined in a sample of 674 Italian high school students (mean age=15.5 years, SD=2.1 years). Overt narcissism was positively related to both proactive and reactive subtypes of aggression, whereas covert narcissism related only to reactive aggression. Vanity, Authority, Exhibitionism, and Exploitativeness were the components of overt narcissism related to Proactive Aggression (all remained unique correlates when controlling for Reactive Aggression), whereas Reactive Aggression was associated with the Ex...
Source: Aggressive Behavior - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Andrea Fossati, Serena Borroni, Nancy Eisenberg, Cesare Maffei Source Type: journals
Does illness attribution affect treatment assignment in depression?
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Conclusions: Illness attribution influences treatment assignment to CBT and PHT. However, factors other than illness attribution for depression affect a treatment choice of IPT. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Key Practitioner Message:
Source: Clinical Psychology - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Susanne Schweizer, Frenk Peeters, Marcus Huibers, Jeffrey Roelofs, Jim van Os, Arnoud Arntz Source Type: journals
Erratum to: Sex Differences in Infants' Visual Interest in Toys.
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PMID: 19915970 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Archives of Sexual Behavior - November 14, 2009 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Alexander GM, Wilcox T, Woods R Tags: Arch Sex Behav Source Type: journals
