Spelling suggestions: "subject:"women - apsychological aspects"" "subject:"women - 8psychological aspects""
1 |
Rejection concerns accentuate effects of thin-ideal images on women's body satisfactionChan, Hoi-kei, Gloria., 陳凱琪. January 2010 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Psychology / Master / Master of Philosophy
|
2 |
The relationship between perceived barriers and participation by undergraduate female studentsSaba, Traci L. January 1997 (has links)
The purpose of this investigation was to study the relationship between perceived barriers and participation or non-participation by undergraduate females in recreational programming at Ball State University. For the purposes of this study, anything that reinforces a decision not to participate in a program or activity was considered a barrier. Participants were selected from various college units on campus. They were also grouped based upon on campus or off campus residency and whether they were participants or non-participants in programs sponsored by the Office of Recreation Programs at Ball State University. Each participant (n=160) completed two written surveys: survey one: the Leisure Diagnostic Battery (LDB) and survey two: the Perceived Barriers Survey. Data were analyzed using multiple t-tests and associations were revealed at the .05 level on each of the three scales of the LDB (Barriers to Leisure Experience Scale, Depth of Leisure Involvement Scale and the Perceived Leisure Competence Scale). Many perceived personality traits influenced whether a female student participated in campus recreational programming. Survey two also presented associations at the .05 level for the following specific perceived barriers: discomfort; lack of motivation; fatigue; feelings about one's body; other people; pain; lack of time available; inconvenient hours; body image; school responsibilities and a lack of knowledge about what programs were available. Each of these barriers represents a call to action for recreation professionals. Several program strategies were suggested to minimize or eliminate these barriers, and to recruit and retain more female students in campus recreational programming. / Fisher Institute for Wellness
|
3 |
A study of pregnant women who have previously given birth to a handicapped or dead childHo, Dig-fan, Eric January 1985 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Clinical Psychology / Master / Master of Social Sciences
|
4 |
The effect of twelve weeks of exercise on depression, self-esteem, and locus-of-control in a wellness program sample of women aged 65 and olderKnittle, Virginia Rau, 1930- January 1988 (has links)
Because half of age-related physical losses result from inactivity and disuse, and loss frequently antecedes depression and decreased self-esteem; exercise intervention offers potential physiological and psychological benefits. Self-efficacy and personal control is additionally promoted in a wellness concept program. The effect of twelve weeks of wellness-oriented exercise upon depression, self-esteem, and locus of control orientation is studied in an exercise and non-exercise control group of community residing women 65 and older. Statistically significant post-exercise changes result from reductions in two self-report measures of depression in the exercise group, and increased self-esteem scores in the control group. A non-representative sample may account for high pre-exercise scores in all three dependent variables. A replication with a larger, random, representative sample of older people and domain-specific measures is recommended to improve the study of hypothesized psychological benefits associated with exercise.
|
5 |
A feminist phenomenological description of depression in low-income South African womenDukas, Carla Justine 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2014. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: A review of the past decade of literature on the subject of depression in South African
women revealed a paucity of research that documents the perspectives of low-income
women who have been diagnosed with depression. Informed by this and recent feminist
critiques of the concept of depression, this study aimed to bring traditionally overlooked
perspectives to the fore by providing rich descriptions of the subjectively lived
experience of depression, as recounted by low-income women themselves. This feminist
phenomenological study took place in a poor, rural community in the Western Cape
Province of South Africa. Semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted with ten
low-income women who had been diagnosed with depression. The transcribed
interviews were analysed using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis. A number of
important findings emerged. Firstly, participants were seen to express somatic
complaints ahead of (and more frequently than) disclosures of sadness. Secondly,
participants often described experiencing their psychological distress as anger, anxiety
and a changed sense of self. Thirdly, participants generally attributed these experiences
(and their overall distress) to a history of childhood trauma, the loss of important
relationships, being physically, sexually or emotionally abused, feeling under supported
and overburdened by multiple responsibilities, living in dangerous communities, and/or
the various consequences of poverty. Finally, it was observed that while symptoms of
suicidal ideation and intent were present in many of the women interviewed, strong
religious and cultural norms existed and generally functioned to silence and deny the
subject. Overall, the women’s subjective experiences, understandings and descriptions
of depression allowed a more complex picture to emerge than that which is currently
offered by mainstream biomedical models. Consequentially, the current
conceptualisation of the term “depression” was deemed to be inadequate, specifically
because it does not fully capture low-income women’s experiences of distress, and also
because it tends to obscure the possible impact of socio-economic and political contexts
on their mental health. Implications of these findings include firstly, that not only does
the diagnosis of depression serve to medicalise women’s misery, but it may
simultaneously serve to obscure their feelings of anger, anxiety, sadness, hopelessness
and other symptoms of distress that are intrinsically linked to their disadvantageous
social and living conditions. Secondly, the findings indicate that the use of traditional
diagnostic and suicide assessment interviews may be unhelpful or even irresponsible in
some South African contexts. Finally, many of the study findings warrant further
investigation and psychological research. Recommendations to this end are thus
included and stress the need to use theoretical perspectives and research methodologies that are sensitive to the multilayered, complex psychological experiences of depression
in low-income women. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: ’n Oorsig van die afgelope dekade se literatuur oor depressie by Suid-Afrikaanse vroue
dui op ’n gebrek aan navorsing oor die perspektiewe van vroue uit lae-inkomstegroepe
wat met dié toestand gediagnoseer word. Na aanleiding hiervan sowel as onlangse
feministiese kritiek op die konsep van depressie, was hierdie studie dus daarop
toegespits om tradisioneel miskende perspektiewe na vore te bring deur middel van ’n
ryke beskrywing van die subjektiewe ervaring van die lewe met depressie soos vroue uit
lae-inkomstegroepe self daarvan vertel. Hierdie feministiese fenomenologiese studie is
in ’n arm, landelike gemeenskap in die provinsie Wes-Kaap, Suid-Afrika, onderneem.
Semigestruktureerde diepte-onderhoude is gevoer met tien vroue in die laeinkomstekategorie
wat met depressie gediagnoseer is. Die getranskribeerde onderhoude
is op vertolkende fenomenologiese wyse ontleed. ’n Aantal belangrike bevindinge is
gemaak. Eerstens het die meeste deelnemers somatiese klagtes gehad voordat (en meer
dikwels as wat) hulle oor hul neerslagtigheid en terneergedruktheid gepraat het.
Tweedens het heelwat deelnemers hul sielkundige nood as woede, angs en ’n gewysigde
selfbeskouing beskryf. Derdens het die vroue merendeels hul ervarings (en hul algehele
nood) aan ’n geskiedenis van kindertrauma, die verlies van belangrike verhoudings,
fisiese, seksuele of emosionele mishandeling, ’n gebrek aan ondersteuning tesame met
’n oormaat verantwoordelikhede, hul gevaarlike woonbuurte en/of die verskillende
gevolge van armoede toegeskryf. Laastens is waargeneem dat hoewel die ideasie en
voorneme van selfdood wél as simptome by baie van die respondente opgemerk is, daar
terselfdertyd sterk godsdienstige en kulturele norme bestaan waarvolgens dié onderwerp
oor die algemeen doodgeswyg en ontken word. In die geheel skets die vroue se
subjektiewe ervarings, begrippe en beskrywings van depressie ’n meer komplekse
prentjie as wat hoofstroom- biomediese modelle tot dusver gebied het. Dus blyk die
huidige konseptualisering van die term ‘depressie’ onvoldoende te wees, veral omdat dit
nie die ervarings en nood van vroue uit lae-inkomstegroepe ten volle vasvang nie, en
ook geneig is om die moontlike impak van sosio-ekonomiese en politieke kontekste op
dié vroue se geestesgesondheid te misken. Die implikasies van hierdie bevindinge sluit
eerstens in dat die diagnose van depressie nie net hierdie vroue se nood ‘medikaliseer’
nie, maar terselfdertyd dalk ook hul gevoelens van woede, angs, hartseer, hopeloosheid
en ander simptome van nood wat ten nouste met hul minderbevoorregte maatskaplike en
lewensomstandighede verband hou, verberg. Tweedens dui die bevindinge daarop dat
die gebruik van tradisionele diagnostiese en selfdoodevalueringsonderhoude in sekere Suid-Afrikaanse kontekste nutteloos en selfs onverantwoordelik kan wees. Laastens
regverdig baie van die studie se bevindinge verdere ondersoek en sielkundige navorsing.
Aanbevelings in hierdie verband word dus ingesluit, en beklemtoon onder meer die
behoefte aan teoretiese perspektiewe en navorsingsmetodologieë wat gevoelig is vir die
meervlakkige, komplekse sielkundige ervarings van depressie by vroue uit laeinkomstegroepe.
|
6 |
An exploratory study of women's body image across the life span: the role of cognitive controlLee, Man-shan, Emily., 李雯珊. January 2004 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Mental Health / Master / Master of Social Sciences
|
7 |
Psychological factors of disordered eating in pregnant womenChui, Hang-wai, 徐恆慧 January 2005 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Community Medicine / Master / Master of Public Health
|
8 |
THE EFFECT OF COHESION, PARTICIPATION MOTIVATION, AND SATISFACTION ON PERFORMANCE IN WOMEN'S INTERCOLLEGIATE BASKETBALL.Fowler, Dianne Elaine. January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
|
9 |
Developmental Stressors and Associated Coping Skills in the Development of Disordered Eating in College FemalesTripp, Margaret Murphy 08 1900 (has links)
There is a lack of clarity in the current literature in how potential etiological factors interact and result in disordered eating. The purpose of this study was to examine an expanded model of Personality, Social Support, Appraisal/Coping Processes, Abuse History, Internalization of Sociocultural Standards, Psychological Disturbances, and Body Disparagement in the development of disordered eating. The current model was evaluated using 276 women in their transition to college, a time period highly associated with symptoms believed to increase a woman's risk for the development of disordered eating including perceived difficulty coping, weight gain, and negative affect. Structural equation modeling was used to allow simultaneous examination of the causal relationships between the factors. Structural analyses confirmed that college women with previous stressful experiences appraised the adjustment to college as more stressful and reported feeling less able to cope with the transition. Those women who identified the transition as overwhelming were also aware of increased negative mood and psychological states since beginning the school semester. Further, women with previous traumatic sexual experiences appeared to be at additional risk for increased negative affective symptoms. The resulting model confirmed that those women who experience negative mood states and those that endorse strong internalization of cultural values regarding attractiveness encountered increased dissatisfaction and disapproval of their bodies. Finally, women with higher levels of body concern engaged in more eating behaviors associated with disordered eating. The roles of personality functioning and perceived social support could not be identified in the developmental model. The predictive links between constructs in the resulting model provide meaningful information regarding the transition to college and associated risks for development of disordered eating. Validation of the model in an independent sample would provide confirmation of these relationships and longitudinal research examining females' attitudes across crucial developmental periods might provide important information regarding which individuals are most at risk for development of disordered eating.
|
10 |
Psychological correlates of eating disorders: Exploring the continuum perspective.Cohen, Diane L. 08 1900 (has links)
Psychological and behavioral characteristics of female undergraduates with varying levels of disordered eating, as measured by the Questionnaire for Eating Disorder Diagnoses (Q-EDD; Mintz, O'Halloran, Mulholland, & Schneider, 1997), were investigated. Results suggest that the Q-EDD is an appropriate instrument for measuring eating disorder symptomatology. Greater disordered eating was associated with more bulimic, dieting, and weight fluctuation symptoms, higher impression management and approval-seeking needs, more dichotomous thinking, self control, and rigid weight regulation, and increased concern with body shape and dissatisfaction with facial features. Eating-disordered and symptomatic women evidenced more severe eating disorder behaviors and psychological distress than asymptomatic women. Findings are congruent with a redefined discontinuity perspective of eating disorder symptomatology. Treatment implications and campus-wide preventions are suggested.
|
Page generated in 0.0858 seconds