Search results for "git"

showing 10 items of 7116 documents

Is social capital a mediator between self-control and psychological and social functioning across 34 years

2011

The aim of this study was to investigate the role of social capital assessed in early adulthood in linking self-control in childhood with psychological and social functioning in middle age. Data collected at ages 8, 27, and 42 years were based on the Jyväskylä Longitudinal Study of Personality and Social Development (159 females, 177 males). Self-control was assessed at age 8 using teacher ratings and peer nominations. Social capital at age 27 was operationalized in terms of the breadth of the individuals’ social network and the depth of their close relationships. Psychological functioning at age 42 was indicated by, for instance, psychological well-being, and social functioning was indica…

Longitudinal studySocial PsychologySocial networkbusiness.industryAggressionmedia_common.quotation_subjectSocial changeMiddle ageSocial relationEducationDevelopmental psychologyDevelopmental NeurosciencePsychological well-beingDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicinePersonalitymedicine.symptomLife-span and Life-course StudiesbusinessPsychologySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)ta515media_commonInternational Journal of Behavioral Development
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Longitudinal study on reciprocity between personality traits and parenting stress

2014

Reciprocal associations between the Big Five personality traits and parenting stress—including both parents’ feelings of their distress and perception of their incompetence as parents—were studied with 248 participants (49% of which were males). Longitudinal data, collected at ages 33/36, 42 and 50 years, were used. Cross-lagged path analysis revealed that in case of both mothers and fathers, neuroticism at age 33 predicted high parenting stress, and extraversion at age 33 predicted low parenting stress at age 42. Also, parenting stress at age 36 predicted high neuroticism and low extraversion at age 42. From age 42 to 50, only high parenting stress contributed to low neuroticism. Thus, mo…

Longitudinal studySocial Psychologylongitudinalmedia_common.quotation_subjectvanhemmuusristikkäisyhteydetNeurosispitkittäistutkimusStructural equation modelingEducationDevelopmental psychologyDevelopmental Neurosciencemental disordersDevelopmental and Educational Psychologymedicineparenting stressPersonalityta516Big Five personality traitsLife-span and Life-course Studiesta515media_commonpolkuanalyysistressimedicine.diseasecross-lagged path analysisNeuroticismpersoonallisuusDistressFeelingpersonalityPsychologySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Clinical psychologyInternational Journal of Behavioral Development
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Are friends and romantic partners the “best medicine”? How the quality of other close relations mediates the impact of changing family relationships …

2007

In this longitudinal study, the link between changing relationships between adolescents and their parents and the mediating role of friendships and support from romantic partners on internalizing and externalizing symptoms were analyzed. Based on data on parent—child relationships obtained in 228 adolescents (ages 14 to 17) and their fathers and mothers, three different developmental trajectories were found which were differently linked with internalizing and externalizing symptomatology at ages 17 and 21. The quality of relationships with friends and romantic partners mediated the links between earlier parent—adolescent relationships and later problem behavior. The impact of close relation…

Longitudinal studySocial Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050109 social psychologyEducationDevelopmental psychologyDevelopmental NeuroscienceDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyRomantic partners0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesQuality (business)Life-span and Life-course StudiesAdaptation (computer science)PsychologySocial psychologySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)050104 developmental & child psychologymedia_commonInternational Journal of Behavioral Development
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Examination of the paths between personality, current mood, its evaluation, and emotion regulation

2001

In an ongoing longitudinal study, a Big Five Personality Inventory was completed by 122 men and 126 women at age 33. At age 36, the Brief Mood Introspection Scale, the Meta‐Evaluation Scale, and the Meta‐Regulation Scale were administered to 140 men and 127 women. The results, based on path analyses, lent support to a hypothesized model, according to which current mood (Negative, Positive, Active, Calm) and mood evaluation (Mood Influence, Typicality and Acceptance, Clarity) mediate the relationship between the Big Five personality traits and emotion regulation strategies (Repair, Dampening, Maintenance). For both sexes, Neuroticism was the most significant trait in terms of emotion regulat…

Longitudinal studySocial Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050109 social psychologyScale (music)Neuroticism050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychologyMoodEmotional controlmental disordersIntrospectionPersonality0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesBig Five personality traitsPsychologymedia_commonEuropean Journal of Personality
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Adult life‐styles and their precursors in the social behaviour of children and adolescents

1990

165 males and 155 females (87 per cent of the sample, N = 369, first studied at age 8) were retrieved after 18 years, at the age of 26, in the Jyväskylä Longitudinal Study of Social Development. A mailed questionnaire, personality inventories, and criminal records were used in the analysis of adult life‐styles. Continuity in social behaviour from the age of 8 to 20 was studied earlier (Pulkkinen, 1982) within a two‐dimensional model of impulse control defined by Social Activity vs. Passivity and Strength vs. Weakness of Self‐control. The present results showed that developmental trajectories for weak and strong self‐control obtained at the earlier stages were continued in young adulthood. …

Longitudinal studySocial Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesSocial changePoison control050109 social psychologyImpulsivity050105 experimental psychologyConfirmatory factor analysisDevelopmental psychologyInjury preventionmedicinePersonality0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesYoung adultmedicine.symptomPsychologymedia_commonEuropean Journal of Personality
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School grades as predictors of self-esteem and changes in internalizing problems: A longitudinal study from fourth through seventh grade

2020

This longitudinal study of 562 students (from ages 10 to 13) investigated whether developmental changes in internalizing problems (emotional and peer problems) can be predicted by school grades in mathematics and language arts and whether these predictive relations are mediated by students' self-esteem. The data comprised of teacher-rated internalizing problems, grades in math and language arts, and student self-ratings of self-esteem. The latent change score modeling indicated that math grades positively predicted self-esteem. Furthermore, lower self-esteem was related to an increase in internalizing and emotional problems in the total sample, and to an increase in peer problems in boys. T…

Longitudinal studySocial Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectEarly adolescenceeducationschool gradeskoululaisetSample (statistics)pitkittäistutkimusbehavioral disciplines and activitiesEducationDevelopmental psychologylatent change score modelingReading (process)Developmental and Educational Psychologyinternalizing problems0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesmedia_commonself-esteemChange scoreLanguage artsmatematiikka4. Education05 social sciencesSelf-esteem050301 educationitsetuntotunne-elämän kehitysarvosanattunne-elämäongelmatPsychology0503 educationvertaissuhteet050104 developmental & child psychologyLearning and Individual Differences
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Timing of parenthood in relation to other life transitions and adult social functioning

2009

The timing of having one's first child, in relation to the timing of other transitions into adulthood and to social functioning, was investigated based on the Finnish Jyväskylä Longitudinal Study of Personality and Social Development, conducted from age 8 (173 females and 196 males) to 42. Results showed that in women, relatively early (< 25 years) motherhood was associated with the early timing of all studied transitions (move from parental home, intimate relationship, education, full-time job); in men, early fatherhood was associated only with the early start of an intimate relationship. In women, but not in men, early parenthood was linked to a lower level of education, lower occupat…

Longitudinal studySocial Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectOccupational prestigeSocial changeSocial relationEducationDevelopmental psychologyDevelopmental NeuroscienceVocational educationEarly startDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyPersonalityLife-span and Life-course StudiesPsychologySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)media_commonSocial functioningInternational Journal of Behavioral Development
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Self-esteem: An antecedent or a consequence of social support and psychosomatic symptoms? Cross-lagged associations in adulthood

2008

Abstract This study investigated the relationships of self-esteem with social support and psychosomatic symptoms in cross-lagged longitudinal data with two measurement points and a time lag of 6 years. Two hundred thirteen participants were drawn from the ongoing Jyvaskyla Longitudinal Study of Personality and Social Development, Finland. The present study focused on data collected by questionnaires at ages 36 and 42. The cross-lagged analyses of Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) indicated that high self-esteem at age 36 predicted high social support 6 years later and simultaneously, but to a lesser extent, high social support at age 36 predicted high self-esteem at age 42. In addition, lo…

Longitudinal studySocial Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectSocial changeSelf-esteemErikson's stages of psychosocial developmentStructural equation modelingDevelopmental psychologyAntecedent (grammar)Social supportPersonalityPsychologyGeneral Psychologymedia_commonJournal of Research in Personality
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Immigrant status, gender, and school burnout in Finnish lower secondary school students : A longitudinal study

2017

The aim of this longitudinal study among 9223 students from grade 7 and grade 9 (age 13–14 and 15–16) was to assess whether immigrant status and gender are associated with the level and change (slope) in school burnout among lower secondary school students in the Helsinki metropolitan area. Ninety-seven percent of the variation in school burnout was attributable to individual factors. Both the intercept (2.3, p < 0.001) and slope (0.5, p < 0.001) of school burnout were statistically significant. The slope showed increasing school burnout from grades 7–9. School burnout increased more in girls than in boys. Initially apparent higher school burnout among students who had immigrated to …

Longitudinal studySocial Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjecthealth care facilities manpower and servicesImmigrationeducationkoulu (ilmiöt)Context (language use)pitkittäistutkimusBurnoutuupumusEducationsukupuolischool (phenomena)immigrant statusDevelopmental Neuroscienceupper comprehensive schoolHN Social history and conditions. Social problems. Social reformPedagogyexhaustionDevelopmental and Educational Psychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesStatistical analysis10. No inequalityLife-span and Life-course Studieslower secondary schoolta515media_commonLB1603 Secondary Education. High schools4. Education05 social sciencesMultilevel model050301 educationschool burnoutmaahanmuuttajatyläkouluPsychology0503 educationSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)psychological phenomena and processes050104 developmental & child psychologyClinical psychologyInternational Journal of Behavioral Development
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The reciprocal effects of social network site use and the disposition for self-disclosure: A longitudinal study

2013

Since the advent of social network sites (SNSs), scholars have critically discussed the psychological and societal implication of online self-disclosure. Does Facebook change our willingness to disclose personal information? The present study proposes that the use of SNSs and the psychological disposition for self-disclosure interact reciprocally: Individuals with a stronger disposition show a higher tendency to use SNSs (selection effect). At the same time, frequent SNS use increases the wish to self-disclose online, because self-disclosing behaviors are reinforced through social capital within the SNS environment (socialization effect). In a longitudinal panel study, 488 users of SNSs wer…

Longitudinal studySocial networkbusiness.industrySocializationDispositionHuman-Computer InteractionArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Self-disclosureComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDSOCIETYSocial mediaInformationSystems_MISCELLANEOUSbusinessPsychologySocial psychologyPersonally identifiable informationGeneral PsychologySocial capitalComputers in Human Behavior
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