Search results for "interpersonal relations"

showing 10 items of 344 documents

Sympathetic Nervous System Synchrony in Couple Therapy

2016

The aim of this study was to test whether there is statistically significant sympathetic nervous system (SNS) synchrony between participants in couple therapy. To our knowledge, this is the first study to measure psychophysiological synchrony during therapy in a multiactor setting. The study focuses on electrodermal activity (EDA) in the second couple therapy session from 10 different cases (20 clients, 10 therapists working in pairs). The EDA concordance index was used as a measure of SNS synchrony between dyads, and synchrony was found in 85% of all the dyads. Surprisingly, co-therapists exhibited the highest levels of synchrony, whereas couples exhibited the lowest synchrony. The client-…

AdultMaleSympathetic nervous systemmedicine.medical_specialtySociology and Political ScienceSocial Psychologycouple therapyInterprofessional RelationsAudiologyConcordance index050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychologyCouples TherapyHeart RatemedicineHumansInterpersonal Relations0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesta515Web sitesympathetic nervous systemFamily CharacteristicsRespirationFamily characteristics05 social sciencesGalvanic Skin ResponseProfessional-Patient RelationsMiddle AgedClinical Psychologymedicine.anatomical_structure050902 family studiesFemale0509 other social sciencespsychophysiological synchronyPsychologySkin conductanceSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Journal of Marital and Family Therapy
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The dimensions of mobilities: The spatial relationships between corporeal and digital mobilities

2013

Abstract The aim of this article is to study how the corporeal and digital mobilities are spatially organised in relation to each other in everyday life. The dimensions of mobilities are modelled by using survey data (N = 612) collected from Finland in 2011, Multiple Correspondence Analysis (MCA) and Multiple Regression Analysis (MRA). The results show that the combined use of corporeal and digital means of mobility affect the spatial organisation of mobilities only little. The results indicate that young people and students are more likely to benefit from their mobility in networking activities as they are equipped with a larger variety of mobility means than older people and pensioners. L…

AdultMaleWorkAdolescentUrban PopulationSociology and Political ScienceMobilitiesSpatial organisationMovementCombined useTransportationEducationYoung AdultLeisure ActivitiesSex FactorsMultiple correspondence analysisSurveys and QuestionnairesHumansHuman ActivitiesInterpersonal RelationsSociologyta518Everyday lifeFinlandAgedBehaviorModels StatisticalCommunicationAge FactorsSocial Supportta5142Gender studiesMiddle Agedta5141Survey data collectionFemaleSmartphoneElectronicsOlder peopleSocial Science Research
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Want a tip? Service performance as a function of emotion regulation and extraversion.

2011

Surface acting and deep acting with customers are strategies for service performance, but evidence for their effectiveness is limited and mixed. We propose that deep acting is an effective strategy for most employees, whereas surface acting's effect on performance effectiveness depends on employee extraversion. In Study 1, restaurant servers who tended to use deep acting exceeded their customers' expectations and had greater financial gains (i.e., tips) regardless of extraversion, whereas surface acting improved tips only for extraverts, not for introverts. In Study 2, a call center simulation, deep acting improved emotional performance and increased the likelihood of extrarole service beha…

AdultMaleWorkAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectEmotionsExtraversion PsychologicalYoung AdultProfessional CompetenceHumansInterpersonal RelationsBig Five personality traitsSocial BehaviorStudentsFunction (engineering)Internal-External ControlApplied Psychologymedia_commonService (business)Extraversion and introversionEmotional regulationPennsylvaniaService personnelEmotional laborInteractive effectsFemalePsychologySocial psychologyPersonalityJournal of Applied Psychology
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The Role of Work Group in Individual Sickness Absence Behavior

2008

The purpose of our two-year follow-up study was to examine the effect of the social components of the work group, such as group absence norms and cohesion, on sickness absence behavior among individuals with varying attitudes toward work attendance. The social components were measured using a questionnaire survey, and data on sickness absence behavior were collected from the employers' records. The study population consisted of 19,306 Finnish municipal employees working in 1,847 groups (78% women). Multilevel Poisson regression modeling was applied. The direct effects of work group characteristics on sickness absence were mostly insignificant. In contrast, both of the social components of …

AdultMaleWorkPsychometricsSocial PsychologyPsychometricsHealth StatusHealth BehaviorInterpersonal relationshipsymbols.namesakeGroup cohesivenessSurveys and QuestionnairesAbsenteeismHumansInterpersonal RelationsPoisson DistributionProspective StudiesPoisson regressionWorkplaceFinlandPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthAttendanceQuestionnaireMental healthMental HealthAbsenteeismsymbolsFemalePsychologySocial psychologyJournal of Health and Social Behavior
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Relationship Status as an Influence on Cybersex Activity: Cybersex, Youth, and Steady Partner

2013

The authors focus on the influence of participants' having or not having a steady partner when reference to cybersex use. Participants were 1,239 young, Spanish individuals who completed the Internet Sex Screening Test. Results showed the influence of being in a relationship on certain consumption dimensions of cybersex; the influence was found to be greater in men than in women. In general, cybersex activity was higher for single participants, although it was also significant for participants with a steady partner. The authors' findings facilitate the comprehension of the effect of new technologies in intimate human relationships.

AdultMaleYouthAdolescentFamily ConflictScreening testHuman relationshipsPersonal SatisfactionInterpersonal relationshipSex FactorsSurveys and QuestionnairesEroticaHumansMass ScreeningConsumption (economics)MotivationInternetbusiness.industryAge FactorsCybersexObject AttachmentExtramarital RelationsSelf ConceptComprehensionClinical PsychologySexual PartnersSpainCompulsive BehaviorFemaleThe InternetSexbusinessPsychologySocial psychologyNew technologies
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Parent contributions to friendship stability during the primary school years.

2018

The present study examines whether characteristics of parents predict the stability of a child’s best friendships across the primary school years. Participants included 1,523 Finnish children (766 boys) who reported involvement in a total of 1,326 reciprocated friendship dyads in the 1st grade (M = 7.16 years old). At the onset of the study, mothers and fathers completed questionnaires describing their own parenting (i.e., behavioral control, psychological control, and affection toward the child) and depressive symptoms. Child scores for peer status (i.e., acceptance and rejection) were derived from 1st grade peer nomination data. Discrete-time survival analyses predicted the occurrence and…

AdultMalechildren (age groups)media_common.quotation_subjecteducationlapset (ikäryhmät)PsycINFOArticlePeer Group050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychologyvanhempi-lapsisuhdeInterpersonal relationshipSurveys and QuestionnairesAffectionHumansInterpersonal Relationsparent-child relationship0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesParent-Child RelationsChildFinlandta515General PsychologyDepressive symptomsDepression (differential diagnoses)media_commonDepressive DisorderfriendsSchoolsParenting4. Education05 social sciencesparentsPeer grouphumanitiesFriendshipystävyysvanhemmatfriendshipFemaleNominationPsychologyystävät050104 developmental & child psychologyJournal of Family Psychology
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Probing birth-order effects on narrow traits using specification-curve analysis

2017

The idea that birth-order position has a lasting impact on personality has been discussed for the past 100 years. Recent large-scale studies have indicated that birth-order effects on the Big Five personality traits are negligible. In the current study, we examined a variety of more narrow personality traits in a large representative sample ( n = 6,500–10,500 in between-family analyses; n = 900–1,200 in within-family analyses). We used specification-curve analysis to assess evidence for birth-order effects across a range of models implementing defensible yet arbitrary analytical decisions (e.g., whether to control for age effects or to exclude participants on the basis of sibling spacing).…

AdultMalemedia_common.quotation_subject050109 social psychologyPersonal SatisfactionImpulsivity050105 experimental psychologyDevelopmental psychologyRisk-TakingGermanymedicinePersonalityHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesInterpersonal RelationsSiblingBig Five personality traitsGeneral PsychologyReciprocity (cultural anthropology)Internal-External Controlmedia_commonAged05 social sciencesLife satisfactionMiddle AgedBirth orderLocus of controlAttitudeFemalemedicine.symptomBirth OrderPsychologySocial psychologyPersonality
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Police attitudes toward policing partner violence against women: do they correspond to different psychosocial profiles?

2010

This study analyzed whether police attitudes toward policing partner violence against women corresponded with different psychosocial profiles. Two attitudes toward policing partner violence were considered—one reflecting a general preference for a conditional law enforcement (depending on the willingness of the victim to press charges against the offender) and the other reflecting a general preference for unconditional law enforcement (regardless of the victim’s willingness to press charges against the offender). Results from a sample of 378 police officers showed that those police officers who expressed a general preference for unconditional law enforcement scored higher in other-oriented…

AdultMalemedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlEmpathyInterpersonal relationshipYoung AdultLaw EnforcementProfessional CompetenceInjury preventionHumansInterpersonal RelationsApplied PsychologyCrime Victimsmedia_commonAnalysis of VarianceStereotypingLaw enforcementMiddle AgedPreferencePoliceUnited StatesClinical PsychologyPublic OpinionSpouse AbuseDomestic violenceWomen's HealthFemaleStereotyped BehaviorPsychologyPsychosocialSocial psychologyJournal of interpersonal violence
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Mixing against culture vs mixing against nature: ontologization of prohibited interethnic relationships.

2009

In this paper, we develop the theory of ontologization: Social representations that prevent members of minority and majority groups who are living in contact with each other to mingle. The process of ontologization consists of separating some humans from their own species, and anchoring them in another environment, that of an animal, for example. We propose that underlying the famous slogan "equal but separate" is the social representation of interracial mixing as a "counter-nature" phenomenon. It is predicted that a sexual relationship between people of different "races" leads to a greater degree of ontologization, and, as such, this miscegenation will be explained in terms of biologistic …

AdultMalemedia_common.quotation_subjectRacial purityThinkingInterpersonal relationshipJudgmentYoung AdultArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)SloganPhenomenonSocial representationEthnicityHumansInterpersonal RelationsSociologyInterracial marriagesGeneral Psychologymedia_commonStereotypingCultural CharacteristicsSocial IdentificationGroup ContactGender IdentityGender studiesAnti-miscegenation attitudesGeneral MedicineRace RelationsExtramarital RelationsExtramarital RelationsOntologisazionInstinctAnti-miscegenation attitudes; Group Contact; Interracial marriages; Ontologisazion; Racial purityAttitudePsychological DistanceAtavismConstrual level theoryFemaleSocial psychologyPrejudiceInternational journal of psychology : Journal international de psychologie
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Bipolar disorders and affective temperaments: a national family study testing the "endophenotype" and "subaffective" theses using the TEMPS-A Buenos …

2007

The purpose of this study is to examine the prevalence of affective temperaments between clinically unaffected relatives of bipolar patients and secondarily to investigate the impact of these "subaffective" forms on their quality of life (QoL).The study was performed in seven sites across Argentina. We administered the scales TEMPS-A and Quality of Life Index to a sample of 114 non-ill first degree relatives of bipolar disorder patients ("cases") and 115 comparison subjects without family history of affective illness ("controls"). We used The Mood Disorder Questionnaire to rule out clinical bipolarity.Mean scores on all TEMPS-A subscales were significantly higher in cases, except for hypert…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyBipolar Disordermedia_common.quotation_subjectArgentinaQuality of lifeSurveys and QuestionnairesmedicinePersonalityHumansInterpersonal RelationsBipolar disorderFirst-degree relativesFamily historyPsychiatryTemperamentmedia_commonPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesMood DisordersMood Disorder QuestionnaireMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseAnxiety DisordersCyclothymic DisorderIrritable MoodPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyCross-Sectional StudiesPhenotypeEndophenotypeCase-Control StudiesQuality of LifeTemperamentFemaleDysthymic DisorderPsychologyJournal of affective disorders
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