Search results for "Moderation"

showing 10 items of 210 documents

Importance of Personality for Objective and Subjective-Physical Health in Older Men and Women

2020

Objective and subjective health generally have a positive relationship, although their association may be moderated by factors such as gender and personality. We aimed to analyze the association between personality and objective (metabolic syndrome (MetS)) and subjective-physical health in older men and women. For this purpose, in 138 participants (53.6% women, Mage = 66.85), neuroticism, conscientiousness, extraversion, openness, and agreeableness (NEO Five Factor Inventory), subjective-physical health (Short Form Health Survey, SF-36), and MetS (employing waist circumference, blood pressure, triglycerides, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and glycated hemoglobin) were assessed. Logis…

AgreeablenessMalePersonality InventoryHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesismedia_common.quotation_subjectHealth Statuslcsh:Medicine050109 social psychologyLogistic regressionPersonality Disorders050105 experimental psychologyArticlemetabolic syndromeolder peopleDiagnostic Self EvaluationOpenness to experiencegenderPersonalityHumanssubjective health0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesneuroticismconscientiousnessmedia_commonAgedExtraversion and introversion05 social scienceslcsh:RPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthConscientiousnessMiddle AgedModerationNeuroticismextraversionFemalePsychologyClinical psychologyPersonalityInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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Work-family conflict and its relations to well-being: the role of personality as a moderating factor

2003

Contains fulltext : 63496.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) The aim of the present study was to examine the role of the Big Five personality dimensions as possible moderating factors between two types of work–family conflicts: work interference with family (WIF); and family interference with work (FIW); and their relationship to well-being in the domains of work and family generally as well. The participants were fathers (n=296) who took part in a national family research project in the Netherlands in 1995. All fathers were employed full-time. The results showed that emotional stability moderated the relationships between WIF and job exhaustion and between WIF and depression. In ad…

AgreeablenessWork–family conflictmedia_common.quotation_subjectModerationMarital satisfactionEmotionally stableWell-beingPersonalityBig Five personality traitsPsychologySocial psychologyDevelopmental PsychopathologyGeneral Psychologymedia_common
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A matter of style? testing the moderating effect of driving styles on the relationship between job strain and work-related crashes of professional dr…

2020

Abstract Different empirical studies suggest that both job strain and driving styles are significant contributors to the work-related traffic crashes suffered by professional drivers. Nevertheless, the current evidence falls considerably short when explaining why driving styles may modify (or not) the relationship between occupational stressors and professional drivers’ safety outcomes. The aim of this study was to examine whether driving styles moderate the effect of job strain on professional drivers’ Work Traffic Crashes (WTCs). This research was performed using the data collected from a sample of 753 professional drivers, responding to a self-report questionnaire on job strain (work str…

Applied psychologyPsychological interventionVulnerabilityTransportationSample (statistics)Work relatedEmpirical researchJob strain0502 economics and business0501 psychology and cognitive sciences050107 human factorsApplied PsychologyCivil and Structural Engineering050210 logistics & transportationJob strainSeguretat viària05 social sciencesStressorSalud laboralConducción de automóvilJCQModerationProfessional driversAccidentes de tránsitoAutomotive EngineeringPsychologyhuman activities
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The moderator role of followers’ personality traits in the relations between leadership styles, two types of task performance and work result satisfa…

2014

Authentic leadership is changing our understanding of what makes good leadership. However, few studies have explored how followers’ individual differences and the nature of the task they perform affect its relation to followers’ work outcomes. We examine the moderator role of two core task types (intellective vs. generative) and two personality traits (conscientiousness and emotional stability) in the relationship between two leadership feedback styles (authentic vs. transactional) and task performance or work result satisfaction in a two-wave experiment. The sample consisted of 228 participants enrolled in an organizational psychology course, 34% of whom had work experience. Our results sh…

Authentic leadershipOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementTransformational leadershipTransactional leadershipLeadership styleConscientiousnessIndustrial and organizational psychologyBig Five personality traitsModerationPsychologySocial psychologyApplied PsychologyEuropean Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology
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Childhood adversity and psychosis: a systematic review of bio-psycho-social mediators and moderators.

2020

AbstractThe association between childhood adversity (CA) and psychosis has been extensively investigated in recent years. An increasing body of research has also focused on the mediating or moderating role of biological and psychological mechanisms, as well as other risk factors that might account for the link between CA and psychosis. We conducted a systematic search of the PsychINFO, Embase, Ovid, and Web of Science databases for original articles investigating the role of genetic vulnerabilities, environmental factors, psychological and psychopathological mechanisms in the association between CA and psychosis up to August 2019. We included studies with individuals at different stages of …

Child abuseBiopsychosocial modelMediation (statistics)Psychosisgene-environment correlationchild abuseEffect Modifier Epidemiologic03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAdverse Childhood ExperiencesmedicineHumanspsychotic experiencesSettore MED/25 - PsichiatriaApplied Psychologymechanismschildhood traumaGene-environment correlationmedicine.diseaseModeration030227 psychiatryPsychiatry and Mental healthMoodAdult Survivors of Child Adverse EventsPsychotic DisordersGene-Environment InteractionmaltreatmentPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical psychologyPsychopathologyPsychological medicine
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Poly-Victimization in Polish Adolescents: Risk Factors and the Moderating Role of Coping.

2018

This study aimed to investigate the prevalence of poly-victimization in Polish adolescents and assess factors associated with poly-victimization risk across different ecological levels. This study further examined whether coping styles could moderate the impact of poly-victimization on emotional well-being. Participants were 454 adolescents, aged between 13 and 19 years, from an urban region of Poland. Adolescents completed self-report measures assessing community, school, and family risks, along with a peer nomination task measuring social preference. Teachers also completed a measure assessing adolescent problem behaviors. Findings revealed that the majority of the sample (70%) experience…

Child abuseFamily managementMaleCoping (psychology)anything related to child abuseAdolescentchild abuseetiologyeducationSocial preferencesDevelopmental psychologyYoung AdultRisk FactorsDistractionAdaptation PsychologicalPrevalenceHumans0501 psychology and cognitive scienceshealth care economics and organizationsApplied PsychologyCrime VictimsProblem Solvingcultural contextsHigh rateProblem Behavior050901 criminology05 social sciencesLife satisfactionSocial Supportsocial sciencesModerationhumanitiesClinical PsychologyAdolescent BehaviorbullyingFemalePoland0509 other social sciencesPsychology050104 developmental & child psychologyClinical psychologyJournal of interpersonal violence
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Trait anxiety and parental child-rearing behavior: Support as a moderator variable?

1988

Abstract Based on central assumptions of the social support literature and on formulations concerning the construction of competence and consequence expectancies, a model for the interaction of maternal and paternal child-rearing behavior in the development of children's trait anxiety is presented. Hypotheses concerning this model are tested empirically; 160 boys and 169 girls (aged 12–14 years) responded to the “Erziehungsstil-Inventar” (“Child-Rearing Inventory”), which serves as a measure of child-rearing styles as perceived by the child, as well as to a German adaptation of the “State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children”. General relations between the variables were analyzed by means o…

Child rearingPoison controlHuman factors and ergonomicsModerationSuicide preventionDevelopmental psychologySocial supportInjury preventionmedicineAnxietyGeneral Materials Sciencemedicine.symptomPsychologyClinical psychologyAnxiety Research
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Cognitive and emotional variables predicting treatment outcome of cognitive behavior therapies for patients with medically unexplained symptoms: A me…

2021

Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) is the best-evaluated psychological approach to treat patients with medically unexplained symptoms (MUS). We still need a better understanding of what characterizes patients with MUS who benefit more or less from CBT. This systematic review aimed to identify patients' cognitive-emotional characteristics predicting the outcome of CBT for MUS.A systematic literature search (PubMed, PsycINFO, Web of Science) revealed 37 eligible studies, 23 of these provided data for meta-analyses. Mean correlation coefficients between predictor variables and the outcomes (symptom intensity, physical or social-emotional functioning) were calculated using a random-effects model.…

Cognitive Behavioral Therapybusiness.industryMedically unexplained physical symptomsMedically unexplainedCognitionSomatic symptom disorderPsycINFOmedicine.diseaseModerationAnxiety Disorders03 medical and health sciencesPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical Psychology0302 clinical medicineMoodCognitionMedically Unexplained SymptomsTreatment OutcomeMeta-analysismedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicinebusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical psychologyJournal of psychosomatic research
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The interplay of emotional instability, empathy, and coping on prosocial and aggressive behaviors

2012

Abstract Mediating and moderating effects of socioemotive traits and coping styles on aggression and prosocial behaviors were examined. A sample of 1557 students from Spain (53% male, M age = 13.12) completed self-report instruments of coping, empathy, emotional instability, physical aggression, and prosocial behaviors. Structural equation analysis showed support for two mediation models but little support for moderation. Emotional instability positively predicted emotion-focused coping, which in turn, positively predicted aggression. In contrast, empathy positively predicted problem-focused coping, which in turn, positively predicted prosocial behaviors. Moreover, problem-focused coping po…

Coping (psychology)Aggressionmedia_common.quotation_subjectEmocionsEmpathyImpulsivityModerationEmotional InstabilityDevelopmental psychologyProsocial behaviorPsicologiamedicineTraitmedicine.symptomPsychologySocial psychologyGeneral Psychologymedia_common
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When scary messages backfire: Influence of dispositional cognitive avoidance on the effectiveness of threat communications

2010

We examined whether individual differences in cognitive avoidance influence the effectiveness of threat communications in changing attitudes and intentions regarding health-promoting behaviors. Two-hundred ninety-seven participants completed a measure of dispositional cognitive avoidance and read either a high or a low threat communication. We found that after a high threat message, low cognitive avoiders reported more favorable attitudes toward and intentions to adopt the action recommendation than high cognitive avoiders. The recommended response was appraised more positively by high cognitive avoiders after the low threat message than after the high threat message. Exactly the opposite p…

Coping (psychology)Social PsychologyCognitive avoidanceCognitionPsychologyModerationSocial psychologyGeneral PsychologyJournal of Research in Personality
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