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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Meaning in life among adolescents: Factorial invariance of the Purpose in Life Test and buffering effect on the relationship between emotional dysregulation and hopelessness

José H. Marco-salvadorJoaquín García-alandeteBlanca Gallego-hernandez De TejadaSandra Pérez Rodríguez

subject

AdultMale050103 clinical psychologyAdolescentPsychometricsConcurrent validityPersonal SatisfactionDevelopmental psychologyHopeYoung AdultSex FactorsHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAffective SymptomsMeaning (existential)ChildVida05 social sciencesAge FactorsEmocionsReproducibility of ResultsEmotional dysregulationMental healthTest (assessment)Clinical PsychologySpainAdolescents PsicologiaScale (social sciences)Beck Hopelessness ScaleFemaleConstruct (philosophy)Psychology050104 developmental & child psychology

description

Objective: The purpose of the present study was threefold: first, to analyse the psychometric properties of a 10‐item Spanish version of the Purpose in Life Test, which assesses meaning in life (MiL), in a sample of community adolescents; second, to analyse the differences between the age and gender groups; and third, to analyse whether MiL buffers the relationship between emotional dysregulation and hopelessness. Method: Participants were 1,599 adolescents from 12 to 19 years old, M = 15.69, SD = 2.14. The Purpose in Life Test‐10 Items, the Beck Hopelessness Scale, and the Difficulties in Emotional Regulation Scale were used. Results: A nine‐item version showed good fit, psychometric properties (internal consistency, construct, and concurrent validity), and factorial invariance across gender and age (12-15 years/16-19 years). Difference in MiL between boys and girls was not significant, whereas between age groups was significant. MiL had a strong buffering effect on the relationship between emotional dysregulation and hopelessness. Discussion: It is desirable to promote the sense of MiL in adolescents. MiL plays a significant and strong mediator role in the relationship between emotional dysregulation and hopelessness, reinforcing the positive role of MiL in mental health and as a resource for facing adversity.

10.1002/cpp.2327https://hdl.handle.net/10550/73921