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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
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- Adolescents (2)
- Adults (2)
- Anxiety (2)
- Collectivism (2)
- Cross-Culture (2)
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- Individualism (2)
- Time (2)
- Time Perspective (2)
- Well-being (2)
- Big Five Inventory (1)
- Confirmatory factor analysis (1)
- Denominational differences (1)
- Enneagram (1)
- Open Enneagram of Personality Scales (1)
- Personality (1)
- Psyc_stsc (1)
- Relational anxiety (1)
- Reliability (1)
- Religiosity (1)
- Social trust (1)
- Trait anxiety (1)
- Validity (1)
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
The Reliability And Validity Of The Open Enneagram Of Personality Scales, Kayleigh Kastelein
The Reliability And Validity Of The Open Enneagram Of Personality Scales, Kayleigh Kastelein
Honors Program Projects
The purpose of this study is to assess the reliability and validity of the 36-item Open Enneagram of Personality Scales (OEPS). Our general hypothesis was that the OEPS would show adequate reliability evidence but not validity evidence. Participants were acquired through a small denominationally affiliated Midwest university, Amazon Mechanical Turk, and social media. Test-retest reliability was done with 249 participants while internal consistency reliability, factor analysis, and correlations with the Big Five Inventory (BFI; John, Donahue, & Kentle) were done using 1039 participants. An average Pearson’s correlation of .68 (range: 0.54 - 0.75) showed inadequate test-retest reliability for the OEPS …
Religiosity And Relational Anxiety: A Cross-Denominational Study, Timothy Steininger
Religiosity And Relational Anxiety: A Cross-Denominational Study, Timothy Steininger
Honors Program Projects
Prior research has provided evidence for a correlation between religiosity and anxiety, quantifiable differences between denominations, and a somewhat equivocal link between religiosity and social trust. This present study seeks to extend the existing body of knowledge by assessing the relationship between intrinsic religiosity and both trait and relational anxiety across denominational groups, and by measuring the relationship between relational anxiety and social trust. Participants (N = 1,905) were asked to provide their religious and denominational affiliations. Analysis revealed a modest negative relationship between intrinsic religiosity and trait anxiety. Overall, a weak, positive relationship between intrinsic religiosity and relational …
Time To Stop Worrying: A Correlational Study On Individualist Versus Collectivist Time Perspectives And Anxiety, Anna Waldron
Time To Stop Worrying: A Correlational Study On Individualist Versus Collectivist Time Perspectives And Anxiety, Anna Waldron
Honors Program Projects
Purpose
Research has indicated a significant relationship between anxiety and time perspective (TP), which is the way one views life in terms of the past, present or future. TP is broken down into five facets based on the Zimbardo Time Perspective Inventory (ZTPI), including past negative (PN), past positive (PP), present fatalistic (PF), present hedonistic (PH), and future (F) time perspectives (Zimbardo & Boyd, 1999). These are seen to be impacted by one’s culture as well, although there is a lack of representation in studies on TP cross-culturally which makes it difficult to generalize. In order to add to the …
Time To Stop Worrying: A Correlational Study On Individualist Versus Collectivist Time Perspectives And Anxiety, Anna Waldron
Time To Stop Worrying: A Correlational Study On Individualist Versus Collectivist Time Perspectives And Anxiety, Anna Waldron
Scholar Week 2016 - present
Presentation Location: Weber Center, Room 101
Abstract
Purpose
Research has indicated a significant relationship between anxiety and time perspective (TP), which is the way one views life in terms of the past, present or future. TP is broken down into five facets based on the Zimbardo Time Perspective Inventory (ZTPI), including past negative (PN), past positive (PP), present fatalistic (PF), present hedonistic (PH), and future (F) time perspectives (Zimbardo & Boyd, 1999). Time perspective is thought to be impacted by one’s culture, although there is a lack of representation in studies on TP cross-culturally which makes it difficult to generalize. …