Search results for "personality"

showing 10 items of 1308 documents

Examining the relationship between public speaking anxiety, distress tolerance and psychological flexibility

2020

Public speaking is an important skill for university students to learn and practice as they progress through education and into their careers. However, individuals often avoid facing public speaking, as they lack the skills to cope with the anxiety that arises when speaking in front of others. The current study aimed to investigate the relationship between public speaking anxiety, distress tolerance, and psychological flexibility. A sample of 95 college students completed psychological flexibility measures and self-ratings of public speaking anxiety before and after a public speaking challenge. A behavioral index of public speaking distress tolerance (i.e., speech duration) was also recorde…

050103 clinical psychologyOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementHealth (social science)behavioral assessment taskeducationPsychological interventionesiintymispelkopsychological flexibilityDevelopmental psychology03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineOpenness to experiencemedicineRelevance (law)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesahdistusstressinhallintaDuration (project management)Applied PsychologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPublic speaking anxietyspeech challenge05 social sciencesFlexibility (personality)esiintyminenpublic speaking anxiety030227 psychiatryPublic speakingpuhe (puhuminen)Anxietydistress tolerancemedicine.symptomsocial anxietyPsychology
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A psychological flexibility -based intervention for burnout : A randomized controlled trial

2020

A novel eight-week program based on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) principles was created to alleviate burnout-related ill-being and to enhance well-being. This randomized controlled trial investigated the effectiveness of the program and explored whether changes in psychological flexibility mediated the results of the intervention. The program consisted of structured weekly face-to-face group meetings and daily practices provided via a website. Employees from varying professional backgrounds with burnout (mean age = 47 years, 79% female), who all received usual treatment, 1 were randomized into control (TAU, n = 80, receiving no other support) and ACT + TAU intervention (n = 88, r…

050103 clinical psychologyOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource Managementpsychological symptomsHealth (social science)hyväksymis- ja omistautumisterapiaPsychological interventionBurnoutAcceptance and commitment therapypsychological flexibilityuupumuslaw.invention03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neurosciencestress0302 clinical medicineRandomized controlled triallawwell-beingIntervention (counseling)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesApplied PsychologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicstietoinen läsnäoloburnout05 social sciencesTreatment methodFlexibility (personality)stressiacceptance and commitment therapy (ACT)030227 psychiatrymindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR)PsychologyClinical psychology
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Confirmatory factor analysis and psychometric properties of the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire in participants with personality disorders

2021

Emotional dysregulation is a key symptom in participants with personality disorders. The Emotional Regulation Questionnaire (ERQ) has been studied with nonclinical samples; however, it is necessary to confirm the factorial structure of the ERQ in participants with personality disorders. The aims of the present study were to confirm the factorial structure of the Spanish version of the ERQ and analyse its psychometric properties as well as the association between the ERQ and the Borderline Symptoms List (BSL-23) and the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS). The overall sample was composed of 250 patients with personality disorders, of whom 195 met the criteria for borderline perso…

050103 clinical psychologyPsychometricsPersonality DisordersCognitive reappraisal03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineBorderline Personality DisorderSurveys and QuestionnairesmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAssociation (psychology)Expressive SuppressionBorderline personality disorder05 social sciencesReproducibility of ResultsEmotional regulationEmotional dysregulationmedicine.diseasePersonality disordersConfirmatory factor analysisEmotional Regulation030227 psychiatryClinical PsychologyFactor Analysis StatisticalPsychologyClinical psychologyClinical Psychology & Psychotherapy
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The Symptom in the Group Situation

1996

Group analysis is a methodology that localizes the interactions arising from patients' symptoms and personality disorders. This marks the passage from a clinical-character aspect to a direct vision of the conflictual and unconscious borders between Ego and Superego. Thus the traumatic personal history of the individual is relatively freed from the constrictions of the repetition compulsion present in the symptomatic structures. The author maintains that combined therapy (a weekly group session and a weekly individual session) reduces cases of abandonment of the group caused by the deepest resistances of the id.

050103 clinical psychologyUnconscious mindPsychotherapistSocial PsychologyGroup (mathematics)05 social sciencesRepetition compulsion050108 psychoanalysismedicine.diseasePersonality disordersPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyGroup analysisId ego and super-egoAbandonment (emotional)medicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSession (computer science)PsychologyClinical psychologyGroup Analysis
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Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Health Behavior Change: A Contextually-Driven Approach.

2018

Promoting health behavior change presents an important challenge to theory and research in the field of health psychology. In this paper, we introduce a context-driven approach, the Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) model which is built on Relational Frame Theory. The ACT-based intervention aims to promote individuals’ new health behavior patterns through the improvement of the key construct of psychological flexibility, which is defined as the ability to contact the present moment more fully with acceptance and mindfulness as a conscious human being. Building on the psychological flexibility model, implemented through the six core ACT processes, individuals improve maintenance of lon…

050103 clinical psychologybehavior changeterveyspsykologiaMindfulness6.6 Psychological and behaviouralMini Reviewbehavior maintenancehyväksymis- ja omistautumisterapialcsh:BF1-990Basic Behavioral and Social ScienceAcceptance and commitment therapyRelational frame theorypsychological flexibility03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineClinical ResearchIntervention (counseling)Behavioral and Social SciencePsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesta515General Psychology05 social sciencesBehavior changeEvaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventionsFlexibility (personality)ta3141ACTHealth psychologyMental HealthGood Health and Well Beinglcsh:Psychologyrelational frame theoryterveyskäyttäytyminenCognitive SciencesPsychologyConstruct (philosophy)Mind and BodySocial psychology030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Personality correlates of gaslighting behaviours in young adults

2021

This study focused on gaslighting, a specific type of psychological violence occurring in intimate relationships, where one partner displays controlling behaviours towards the other. The aim of the research was to analyse the association between gaslighting behaviours and dysfunctional personality domains of both abusers and survivors, respectively assessed through the PID-5-IRF and the PID-5-BF. A group of 250 young adults (males=124), aged 18–30 years (M=22.99, SD= 3.02), took part in this study. Our results showed that (a) for abusers, detachment, disinhibition and psychoticism were positively associated with gaslighting behaviours, and (b) for survivors, antagonism, disinhibition and ps…

050103 clinical psychologyintimate partner violencemedia_common.quotation_subject050901 criminology05 social sciencesDevelopmental psychologygaslightingyoung adulthoodBehavioral Neurosciencepersonality traitDomestic violencePersonality0501 psychology and cognitive sciences0509 other social sciencesBig Five personality traitsYoung adultPsychologyPsychological violencemedia_commonJournal of Sexual Aggression
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Child maltreatment is linked to difficulties in identifying with social groups as a young adult.

2019

Subjective feelings of disconnectedness from social groups have been found to be detrimental to mental health. However, little is known about the factors determining people's ability to attach to groups. We contend that child maltreatment will impair people's ability to group identification across the lifespan, and present a cross-sectional study involving 396 young adults from Spain, aimed at testing this hypothesis. Results reveal that, as expected, a greater degree of maltreatment received before the age of 14 is linked to a lower number of social groups one identifies with, even after controlling for current levels of depression, anxiety, and borderline personality. Statement of contrib…

050103 clinical psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectEmotionsPoison controlAnxietySuicide preventionDevelopmental psychologySocial group03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineDevelopmental NeuroscienceAdaptation PsychologicalDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicinePersonalityHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesChild AbuseSocial identity theoryChildmedia_common05 social sciencesMental health030227 psychiatryCross-Sectional StudiesFeelingAnxietymedicine.symptomPsychologyThe British journal of developmental psychologyReferences
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Attachment characteristics and treatment outcome following inpatient psychotherapy: Results of a multisite study

2006

Abstract The authors evaluated 617 patients at hospital admission using an interpersonal interview analyzed with the Adult Attachment Prototype Rating (Strauss, Lobo-Drost, & Pilkonis, 1999) in nine different psychotherapeutic hospitals. Attachment characteristics derived from this method served as predictors of treatment outcome. Outcome was quantified in all sites using the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised, Inventory of Interpersonal Problems, and, in a subsample, the Impairment Score (Schepank, 2003) as an observer rating. All measures were administered at patient admission and discharge. Additionally, patients completed the Bielefeld Questionnaire of Client Expectations (BQCE) at admission …

050103 clinical psychologymedicine.medical_specialtyPsychotherapist05 social sciencesTreatment outcomeInterpersonal communicationInpatient psychotherapy050108 psychoanalysismedicine.diseasePersonality disordersClinical PsychologyInterpersonal relationshipEating disordersmedicineAnxiety0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesMedical diagnosismedicine.symptomPsychologyPsychiatryClinical psychologyPsychotherapy Research
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Baseline Patient Characteristics Predicting Outcome and Attrition in Cognitive Therapy for Social Phobia: Results from a Large Multicentre Trial

2014

We examined the role of baseline patient characteristics as predictors of outcome (end-state functioning, response and remission) and attrition for cognitive therapy (CT) in social anxiety disorder (SAD). Beyond socio-demographic and clinical variables such as symptom severity and comorbidity status, previously neglected patient characteristics (e.g., personality, self-esteem, shame, interpersonal problems and attachment style) were analysed. Method Data came from the CT arm of a multicentre RCT with n = 244 patients having DSM-IV SAD. CT was conducted according to the manual by Clark and Wells. Severity of SAD was assessed at baseline and end of treatment with the Liebowitz Social Anxiety …

050103 clinical psychologymedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentmedia_common.quotation_subjectLiebowitz social anxiety scaleLogistic regressionlaw.invention03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRandomized controlled triallawAttachment theorymedicinePersonality0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychiatrymedia_common05 social sciencesSocial anxietymedicine.diseaseComorbidity030227 psychiatryClinical PsychologyCognitive therapyPsychologyClinical psychologyClinical Psychology & Psychotherapy
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The Influence of Ambiguity Tolerance on Willingness to Communicate in L2

2017

The main purpose of this chapter is to find empirical evidence for the role of ambiguity tolerance (AT) in shaping one’s L2 willingness to communicate levels in the context of the English-as-a-foreign-language (EFL) classroom, in the Polish educational context. As the pyramid model of L2 WTC proposes (MacIntyre et al., 1998), AT’s basis is constituted by the most distal and enduring influences of personality. For this reason, ambiguity tolerance, conceived of as a personality variable (Furnham and Marks, 2013), can have a significant impact on L2 WTC. The complexity of interrelated mechanisms embedded in the foreign language learning context induce ambivalent feelings of being simultaneousl…

060201 languages & linguisticsmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesFace (sociological concept)Context (language use)06 humanities and the artsAmbivalence050105 experimental psychologyFeeling0602 languages and literaturemedicinePersonalityAnxiety0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesWillingness to communicatemedicine.symptomPsychologyEmpirical evidenceSocial psychologymedia_common
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