16 results
Search Results
2. Social motor synchrony in autism spectrum conditions: A systematic review.
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Glass, Devyn and Yuill, Nicola
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MOTOR ability , *PSYCHOTHERAPY patients , *AUTISM , *PSYCHOLOGY of movement , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *SOCIAL attitudes , *SOCIAL skills , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *PSYCHOSOCIAL functioning , *SOCIAL isolation , *SOCIAL participation , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Some researchers suggest difficulties synchronising with a partner could underpin the social differences associated with Autism Spectrum Condition, potentially acting as a marker for autism. Social Motor Synchrony (SMS) is one aspect of synchrony that could augment observational diagnostic procedures. However, the full breadth of literature examining SMS in autism has not been systematically reviewed. A systematic review following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis guidelines yielded 29 papers meeting inclusion criteria. Of 21 studies including a comparison group, all indicated weaker SMS between two autistic partners and in mixed-neurotype partnerships compared with two non-autistic partners. Papers involving mixed-neurotype pairs without a comparison group showed higher than chance SMS and demonstrated an increase in SMS over time following rhythm-based interventions. Although research so far demonstrates weaker SMS in pairs involving an autistic partner compared with non-autistic pairs, we identified several limitations which may have influenced SMS in autistic people and their partners. Further work is needed with autistic partnerships, more natural and preferred tasks within comfortable settings and partnerships, and more work to identify the basis of synchrony differences. We set out implications for design of further research. When two people interact, they often fall into sync with one another by moving their bodies at the same time. Some say autistic people are not as good as non-autistic people at moving at the same time as a partner. This has led some researchers to ask whether measuring synchrony might help diagnose autism. We reviewed the research so far to look at differences in Social Motor Synchrony (SMS) (the way we move together) between autistic people and people they interact with. The research suggests that interactions involving an autistic partner (either two autistic partners, or an autistic and non-autistic partner) show lower synchrony than a non-autistic pair. However, we recognised elements in the research so far that may have affected SMS in interactions involving an autistic person. One way SMS may have been affected in research so far might be the way interactions have been set up in the research studies. Few papers studied interactions between two autistic people or looked at synchrony in comfortable environments with autistic-preferred tasks. The studies also do not explain why synchrony might be different, or weaker, in pairs involving autistic partners. We use these limitations to suggest improvements for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Exploring young children's argumentation as a heuristic intertextual practice.
- Author
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Hong, Huili, Cai, Qijie, and Wang, Min
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READING , *CONVERSATION , *QUALITATIVE research , *SCHOOLS , *PHONOLOGICAL awareness , *PROBLEM solving , *TEACHING methods , *DISCOURSE analysis , *LANGUAGE arts , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *LITERACY , *LEARNING strategies , *WRITTEN communication - Abstract
Argumentation is a fundamental communicative ability that children develop over time through formal schooling and daily practice with peers and family members. Literature on children's argumentation appears to have focused on their social interactions out of school, clinical environment, or informal pedagogic contexts. Even though there are research inquiries into children's argumentation in formal academic learning, many have been focused on argumentative writing in math or science classes. Much less is known about teacher-led argumentation and the youngest children's emerging argumentation in language art classes, where argumentation is formally and systematically introduced and learned. This paper reports a year-long ethnographic study on argumentation in a first-grade English language art classroom in the United States. Ethnographic discourse analysis was conducted to analyze two key literacy events from the daily reader's and writer's workshop. It is supplemented with qualitative analysis of the researchers' field notes and the students' artifacts. Our findings highlight the inherent intertextual nature of children's argumentation and a critical role the teacher played in eliciting and steering the children's argumentation construction through strategic instructional conversations (especially accountable talk). Our findings also revealed teacher-led children's intertextual argumentation as a powerful heuristic process and tool to enrich students' learning. The paper concludes some classroom argumentation teaching practices based on the research findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Methods for more-than-human wellbeing: A collaborative journey with object interviews.
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Thorpe, Holly, Brice, Julie, Soltani, Anoosh, Nemani, Mihi, and O'Leary, Grace
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HUMANISM , *WOMEN , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *HEALTH status indicators , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *MEDICAL research , *MATHEMATICAL models , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *THEORY , *COVID-19 pandemic , *WELL-being , *FEMINIST criticism , *CULTURAL pluralism - Abstract
Articulating the complexities of relational wellbeing can be challenging at the best of times, and even more complex during periods of heightened stress and uncertainty. Taking inspiration from feminist materialisms and recent writings on material methods, we explore the potential of object interviews to reveal the material-discursive dimensions of women's experiences of wellbeing during the pandemic. In this paper we describe our research process conducting object interviews with 38 women living in Aotearoa New Zealand from a range of socio-economic, cultural, and ethnic backgrounds. We explore the potential and challenges of object interviews for surfacing new ways of knowing (theoretically, methodologically, and cross-culturally) wellbeing beyond human-oriented health, medical and social-constructionist models, and towards more multidimensional and relational understandings. This paper offers our reflections and learnings about the process of re-turning object interviews and the potential of such approaches for evoking complex ways of knowing wellbeing during and beyond pandemic times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. "We Need Them, They Need Us": Perceived Indispensability and Intergroup Relations.
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Verkuyten, Maykel
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PSYCHIATRY , *SOCIAL problems , *MINORITIES , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *PRACTICAL politics , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *PSYCHOLOGY , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychobiology , *BEHAVIOR , *GROUP identity , *SOCIOECONOMIC status , *THEORY , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOCIAL classes , *CODEPENDENCY , *DEPENDENCY (Psychology) , *GROUP dynamics , *GROUP process - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to advance psychological theory and research on attitudes and behavior towards low status minority groups by discussing group-level indispensability as an important yet largely unexplored factor in intergroup dynamics. Drawing on theory and international research from psychology and the social sciences, the distinction between functional indispensability and identity indispensability is first discussed. Subsequently various positive intergroup implications of perceived indispensability are considered, and for giving a balanced account possible negative outcomes are also discussed. Then, the minority perspective is considered and the question of when positive or negative intergroup implications of perceived indispensability are less or more likely. The paper concludes with future directions for theoretical and empirical development of the notion of group-level indispensability and its intergroup consequences in a range of settings and contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Off track or on point? Side comments in focus groups with teens.
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Sheppard, Lindsay C and Raby, Rebecca
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FOCUS groups , *CONVERSATION , *REFLECTION (Philosophy) , *SOCIAL norms , *RESEARCH , *INTERPERSONAL relations - Abstract
Side comments and conversations in focus groups can pose challenges for facilitators. Rather than seeing side comments as problematic behavior or "failed" data, we argue that they can add to and deepen analyses. Drawing on focus group data with grade nine students from a study on early work, in this methodological paper we discuss three patterns. First, side comments have highlighted where participants required clarification, and illustrated their views and questions about the research process. Second, side comments added new data to our analysis, including personal reflections, connections to others' comments, and information about participants' uncertainties about the research topics. Third, these comments offered insight into peer relations and dynamics, including participants' reflections on age, and how they deployed gender relations in their discussions. Provided that their use fits within established ethical protocols, we argue that there is a place for attention to side comments, especially in focus group research with young people where adult-teen hierarchies and peer dynamics might lead young people to engage more with peers than directly respond to researchers' questions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Divorce Narratives and Class Inequalities in Indonesia.
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Rinaldo, Rachel, Nisa, Eva F., and Nurmila, Nina
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MARRIAGE , *RESEARCH funding , *ENDOWMENTS , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *ISLAM , *INTERVIEWING , *SEX distribution , *SPOUSES , *COURTS , *MUSLIMS , *DIVORCE , *DOMESTIC violence , *SOCIOLOGY , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOCIAL classes , *MARRIAGE & family therapy , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
In the past 20 years, divorce has increased in Indonesia. Indonesian statistics show that divorces initiated by women exceed those by men. One issue that is often neglected is how socioeconomic differences also play a role in this matter. Drawing on our collaborative research on Muslim divorces in Indonesia, this paper focuses on the interplay between divorce strategies and socioeconomic differences among Muslim couples. Our in-depth interviews with 93 Muslim men and women and 19 judges from Islamic courts show that class differences shape distinctive dynamics of divorce among Muslim Indonesians. Couples from less educated, lower-income backgrounds accept marriage dissolution more easily, with women becoming much less tolerant of men's behaviors such as infliction of domestic violence, infidelity, and failure to provide financial support. Educated, middle-class urban couples divorce for similar reasons but tend to experience a lengthier process accompanied by complex layers of conflict. Many educated women's narratives emphasize their ability to support themselves through working, and a desire to be free of a bad marriage at any cost. Class and education thus contribute to significant differences in the experience and trajectories of divorce in Indonesia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Modern Marriage in a Traditional Society: The Influence of College Education on Marriage in India.
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Vikram, Kriti
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WOMEN'S education , *MARRIAGE , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *SELF-efficacy , *SPOUSES , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *AGE distribution , *DECISION making , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
India has witnessed a dramatic expansion of higher education, and women have emerged as noteworthy winners in the process. This paper focuses on the role of female college education on four dimensions of marriage: age at marriage, autonomy in the choice of spouse, work and financial empowerment, and quality of marital relationship. The study uses a sample of 35,561 currently married women from the 2011-2012 wave of the nationally representative India Human Development Survey (IHDS). It demonstrates that higher education, particularly college education, enables women to lead lives substantively different from their less-educated peers. College-educated women marry at later ages, enjoy greater autonomy in choosing their husbands, and have a more egalitarian relationship with their spouses. Furthermore, the study finds that educational homogamy and hypogamy afford greater autonomy to women. Even without a concomitant increase in labor force participation, college education among women appears to have a transformative effect on marriage in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. The Role of Attachment, Insecurity, and Stress in Partner Maltreatment: A Meta-Analysis.
- Author
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Knox, Laura, Karantzas, Gery, and Ferguson, Elizabeth
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META-analysis , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability , *INTIMATE partner violence , *ATTACHMENT behavior , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *AGGRESSION (Psychology) , *ANXIETY , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
Negative, destructive, and abusive behaviors in romantic relationships can vary from explicit kinds of abuse and aggression to more subtle and seemingly innocuous slights against or ways of treating a partner. However, regardless of the severity or explicit nature, these behaviors all, to one extent or another, reflect acts of invalidation, disrespect, aggression, or neglect toward a partner, and could be considered maltreatment of a partner. The current paper proposes the term partner maltreatment as a broad overarching concept, which was used to facilitate a meta-analytic synthesis of the literature to examine the associations between attachment insecurity (i.e., attachment anxiety, attachment avoidance) and perpetration of partner maltreatment. Additionally, this paper situated partner maltreatment within an attachment-based diathesis-stress perspective to explore the moderating role of stress. Five databases were systematically searched for published and unpublished studies that examined the direct association between perpetrator's adult attachment orientation and perpetration of partner maltreatment behaviors. We synthesized effect sizes from 139 studies (N = 38,472) and found the effect between attachment insecurity and acts of partner maltreatment varied between r =.11 to.21. Our findings provide meta-analytic evidence to suggest that attachment insecurity is a significant individual vulnerability factor (diathesis) associated with partner maltreatment; and that when individuals with an insecure attachment orientation experience stress, the tendency to perpetrate partner maltreatment is typically heightened. The findings of this meta-analysis provide empirical evidence for the importance of considering and addressing contextual factors, especially stress, for those individuals and couples seeking therapy for partner maltreatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Why do people participate in research interviews? Participant orientations and ethical contracts in interviews with victims of interpersonal violence.
- Author
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Bredal, Anja, Stefansen, Kari, and Bjørnholt, Margunn
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VIOLENCE , *SEX crimes , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITATIVE research , *INTIMATE partner violence , *INTERVIEWING , *HUMAN research subjects , *CRIME victims , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Researchers are increasingly interested in why people want to participate in qualitative interview studies, particularly what they hope to gain from participating. The present paper contributes to this research agenda by analysing the motivations of victims of interpersonal violence: a group that is considered ethically challenging to involve in research, given their history of being intruded upon. The analysis is based on 174 qualitative interviews from three separate studies: two on intimate partner violence and one on sexual assault. A key finding is that many victims welcome the opportunity to participate and often use the interviews for their own purposes. We identified three different 'participant orientations', or ways victims relate to the interview and the research, including 'telling for oneself', 'telling for others' and 'telling for the researcher'. We discuss how these orientations imply different ethical contracts between the participant and researcher and their links to recruitment methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. 'Beyond my Control': Dealing with the Existential Uncertainty of Cancer in Online Texts.
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Kvaale, Kaja, Lian, Olaug S., and Bondevik, Hilde
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ATTITUDES toward illness , *OPTIMISM , *RESEARCH funding , *CULTURE , *UNCERTAINTY , *INTERNET , *COLORECTAL cancer , *EXPERIENCE , *COMMUNICATION , *PUBLISHING , *CANCER patient psychology , *GRIEF , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *WRITTEN communication , *BLOGS ,PELVIC tumors - Abstract
In this paper, we explore how existential aspects of being diagnosed and living with cancer are shared in stories that are publicly communicated online. Through a narrative analysis of online texts and blogs, we explore how people deal with their cancer experiences, how cultural norms about illness are expressed in their stories and why they write and publish their stories online. We found that the writers described cancer diagnosis as a defining moment in their lives. They portrayed it as a crisis that was followed by unpredictability, doubt, grief and loss, fitting with the term 'existential uncertainty'. Writing and sharing their stories online, connecting with others and staying positive were ways of dealing with this uncertainty. These naturally occurring data offer insights into phenomena that are not easily accessed in a clinical setting; moreover, they provide unique insights into the cultural norms in which online illness narratives are embedded. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Stemming the "ageism pandemic": A qualitative inquiry with older adults in residential care facilities during the Covid-19 outbreak.
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Bellanova, Matteo, Romaioli, Diego, and Contarello, Alberta
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ELDER care , *NURSING home patients , *SOCIAL constructionism , *QUALITATIVE research , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *INTERVIEWING , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *EXPERIENCE , *THEMATIC analysis , *STAY-at-home orders , *AGEISM , *DATA analysis software , *SOCIAL support , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *COVID-19 pandemic , *RESIDENTIAL care , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *OLD age - Abstract
The Covid-19 pandemic added to collective concerns, making health risks salient especially for the older population. The health emergency exacerbated an already widespread negative representation of aging, and phenomena such as ageism. With the present qualitative inquiry, 21 episodic interviews were collected with the aim of understanding the experience of older adults in residential care facilities, exploring their ideas of aging and the viewpoints that helped them to respond to the pandemic successfully. A thematic analysis was conducted using NudIst software. The results show that participants described multiple personal and relational resources they used to cope with the pandemic, and they were able to express counter-narratives to the ideas of aging as coinciding with decline, and of lockdown as a source of distress alone. The paper concludes with reflections on the relevance of research capable of challenging unhelpful dominant discourses and averting the risk of them turning into negative prophecies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Two cases of nursing older nursing home residents during COVID-19.
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Jaarsma, Pier, Gelhaus, Petra, and Eklund Saksberg, My
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NURSING home patients , *SELF-efficacy , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *INTERVIEWING , *MEDICAL care , *CODES of ethics , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *NURSING care facilities , *PATIENT-centered care , *ISOLATION (Hospital care) , *ETHICAL decision making , *ETHICS , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *MATHEMATICAL models , *RESEARCH methodology , *CASE studies , *THEORY , *DEMENTIA , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *COVID-19 pandemic , *COVID-19 , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *NURSING ethics , *WELL-being , *OLD age - Abstract
Introduction: Two ethical challenges of nursing home nurses during the COVID-19 pandemic in Sweden are discussed in this paper. Background: Historically, the nurse's primary concern is for the person who is ill, which is the core of nurses' moral responsibility and identity. In Sweden, person-centered care is generally deemed important in nursing older nursing home residents. Objective: To chart moral responsibilities of nursing home nurses in two cases involving older residents during the COVID-19 pandemic in Sweden. Methods: We used Margaret Urban Walker's framework for moral responsibilities and the International Council of Nurses (ICN) code of ethics for nurses (2021) for our normative analysis. Ethical considerations: Written and verbal consent was obtained before the interviews, and information was given that participation was entirely voluntary and possible to cancel at any time before the work was published. The Swedish Ethical Review Agency gave an advisory opinion stating that there were no ethical objections to this research project (Dnr. 2020-05649). Findings: Case #1: a palliative older nursing home resident who was coercively tested for COVID-19, and case #2: a COVID-19–infected resident with dementia who was isolated using sedation. The decision that was finally made in the respective case was analyzed in the light of either consequentialist/utilitarian or non-consequentialist/deontological reasons. Discussion: Empowerment of nurses as moral agents is required for the application of practical wisdom in the balancing of different care relationships (responsibilities), moral identities (professional virtues), and competing moral values. This requires resources and opens possibilities for profound ethical reflection in nursing education and at work. Conclusion: During the COVID-19 pandemic, the moral and professional responsibility of nursing home nurses to deliver person-centered care was sometimes problematically abandoned in favor of a more utilitarian manner of ethical decision-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Internalized Homonegativity, Emotion Dysregulation, and Physical Same-Sex Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration: A Psychological Mediation Framework-Based Model.
- Author
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Trombetta, Tommaso and Rollè, Luca
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PSYCHOLOGICAL abuse , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *SOCIAL stigma , *PSYCHOLOGY , *VIOLENCE , *INTIMATE partner violence , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *LGBTQ+ people , *CONCEPTUAL models , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *FACTOR analysis , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *SEXUAL minorities , *LESBIANS , *SEX crimes , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *EMOTION regulation , *DATA analysis software , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *GAY people - Abstract
Same-sex intimate partner violence (SSIPV) is still under-investigated despite its spreading. Unique risk factors, such as internalized homonegativity, have been found to be related to physical SSIPV perpetration. However, the mechanisms that regulate this association are still unclear. Drawing from the psychological mediation framework (PMF), this paper aimed to explore the relationship between internalized homonegativity and physical SSIPV perpetration, assessing the mediating role of emotion dysregulation. In all, 139 gay and lesbian participants involved in same-sex relationships participated in the study by completing a self-administered online questionnaire. Mediation analyses were used to assess both the direct and indirect effects. Internalized homonegativity was not directly associated with physical SSIPV perpetration. However, internalized homonegativity was positively associated with emotion dysregulation, which, in turn, was positively associated with physical SSIPV perpetration. The indirect effect of internalized homonegativity on physical SSIPV perpetration through emotion dysregulation was also confirmed. The results that emerged extend the application of the PMF to SSIPV. The data found can inform both preventive interventions and treatments targeting SSIPV perpetrators to reduce the phenomenon and limit recidivism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Lived Experience of the Dyad and Their Relationships Following a Fetal Death: A Hermeneutic Phenomenological Study.
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McDonough, Mary Rose and Leone-Sheehan, Danielle
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MEMORY , *GRIEF , *SOCIAL support , *RESEARCH methodology , *SOCIAL media , *MEDICAL personnel , *INTERVIEWING , *PERINATAL death , *SPOUSES , *PATIENTS' families , *EXPERIENCE , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *QUALITATIVE research , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOUND recordings - Abstract
Little is known about the lived experience of the dyad following a fetal death and the impact on relationships. The purpose of this paper is to explore the dyadic relationship between partners, with health care providers, and with the baby's memory after birth. This qualitative study utilized hermeneutic phenomenology. The sample included 10 heterosexual dyads from the United States and Canada. All experienced a fetal death between 6 months and 7 years prior to their interviews. The data revealed three themes: (a) The Dyad Relationship: Moving Through the Experience Together; (b) Keeping the Memory Alive: Memorializing the Baby; and (c) Relationships With Health Care Providers: A Spectrum of Caring. The findings from this study provide the beginning knowledge needed to improve the care of dyads who have experienced a fetal death and for future studies to improve care delivery for dyads as their relationships change after fetal death. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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16. Sociolocation: A Proposed Conceptual Element in Lifespan Development.
- Author
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Burton, Candace W.
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ADOLESCENT development , *RECOGNITION (Psychology) , *SELF-perception , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychobiology , *GROUP identity , *SOCIAL context , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *INTERSECTIONALITY , *AT-risk people , *SOCIAL skills , *SOCIAL integration , *CONCEPTS - Abstract
Individual identity as a function of human development significantly intersects with and is necessarily influenced by the social world. To describe this intersection and its effects, the term sociolocation was proposed, initially in the context of adolescent development, and defined as "self-identification and recognition of social integration through relationships." Almost a decade later, it is apparent that the processes of sociolocation may continue and repeat through the rest of the lifespan. The purpose of this, therefore, paper is to present an expanded definitional and conceptual analysis of sociolocation using the techniques described by Chinn, Kramer, and Sitzman. Such an analysis is important across nursing science, practice, and education, since in all three domains the nurse may encounter individuals engaged in sociolocation. Understanding what this process is and when and how it may occur can be helpful in care planning, learning, and research endeavors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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