5 results match your criteria: "Centro Universitario Cardenal Cisneros (Spain).[Affiliation]"

Background: Although personality trait models have become consolidated as the hegemonic taxonomical models for describing personality and provide excellent capacity for predicting variables of psychological interest (i.e., mental disorders), there are still important gaps in our knowledge about why personality traits predict those variables.

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Article Synopsis
  • The Self-Absorption Scale (SAS) measures dysfunctional self-focused attention, which is linked to emotional disorders, but its Spanish version had not been previously studied.
  • In a study involving 519 Spanish adults, the SAS displayed a symmetrical bifactor structure with a general self-absorption factor and two subscales for private and public self-absorption, all showing strong reliability.
  • Results indicated that the SAS is a valid tool for assessing self-absorption in Spanish adults, although the subscales provide limited additional insights compared to the overall scale.
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Although resilience varies depending on the specific type of adverse situation faced by the individual, to date resilience questionnaires do not consider its situational character. This study aims to develop and validate the Situated Subjective Resilience Questionnaire for Adults (SSRQA), which assesses resilience in five different adverse contexts. A total of 584 Spanish adults (including general population and clinical samples individuals) completed the SSRQA and other measures of resilience, optimism, and self-efficacy.

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The objectives of this study were to replicate the analyses conducted by the creators of the Indicators of Abuse (IOA) Screen with a Spanish sample group and compare the results, to present new validity evidences, to analyze which items were more relevant in the detection of situations of risk of abuse, and to establish a cut-off point to interpret the obtained scores. The IOA was used by 46 professionals from social services teams who assessed the situation of 231 elderly individuals and their main caregivers. The obtained results advocated towards unidimensionality of the scale.

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The Spanish term grima refers to the aversive emotional experience typically evoked when one hears, for example, a scratch upon a chalkboard. Whereas Spanish speakers can distinguish between the concepts of grima and disgust, English and German speakers lack a specific word for this experience and typically label grima as disgust. In the present research, we tested the degree of differentiation between the two aversive experiences in Spanish speakers.

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