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Testing the impact of post-traumatic stress on existential motivation for ideological close- and open-mindednessKahle, Lauren M. 23 May 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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The Impact of Traumatic Symptomology and Social Support on the Effective Management of Death AnxietyCourtney, Emily Pauline 06 June 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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When the Levee Breaks: An SEM Approach to Understanding the Narrative and the Anxiety-Buffer Disruption on PTSD SymptomsSchuler, Eric Robert 05 1900 (has links)
The purpose of the present study was to assess if combining the two frameworks would account for more variance in PTSS than could be accounted for using the frameworks separately. An online community sample from Amazon.com's Mechanical Turk (N = 437), who reported experiencing a prior traumatic event, completed measures that reflected the constructs of narrative centrality, negative affectivity, and death concerns, along with a measure of PTSS. PTSS was regressed on the latent variables of death concerns, narrative centrality, and negative affectivity, along with the latent variable interactions between narrative centrality*death concerns and narrative centrality*negative affectivity. Death concerns was not be predictive of PTSS, whereas narrative centrality and negative affectivity were found to uniquely and interactively account for 77% of the variance in PTSS. Death concerns was found to be a separate construct from negative affectivity. The implications of these findings for the two frameworks are discussed along with future directions. By considering aspects of narrative centrality and negative affectivity, substantial portions of PTSS can be accounted for.
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Identity and Death Threats: An Investigation of Social Identity and Terror Management Processes in Online NewsVang-Corne, Mao H. 09 June 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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