School Psychology Article Feed
February 9th, 2025
Development of the dementia attitude scale focusing on well-being.
Ono I; Nakatani H; Inoue Y; Peng X; Hamada H pubmed id: 39669677Scientists made a new tool called DASFWB to understand what is important for people feeling good if they get dementia. They tested it to make sure it works well. This tool will help make plans to include everyone in society better.
Women football observers' experiences: a perspective from system justification and glass ceiling.
Eratli Şirin Y; Öz G pubmed id: 39669676This study looks at why people, especially women who watch football, support unfair systems even when it's hard for them. It tries to find out why women in Turkey feel left out in a male-heavy football world and how they deal with it.
Realizing the potential of mobile interventions for education.
Breitwieser J; Neubauer AB; Schmiedek F; Brod G pubmed id: 39668147Mobile devices can help with learning by giving just-right help when needed, finding out how well the help works in real life, and seeing how the surroundings affect learning. This paper talks about what needs to be done next to use phones better for education.
Validation of the Italian version of the Eating-Related Eco-Concern Questionnaire: insights into its relationship with orthorexia nervosa.
Tecuta L; Casu G; Tomba E pubmed id: 39664644This study checked if an Italian questionnaire about how worried people are about the environment and how it affects their eating is reliable. They wanted to see how climate change concerns might be linked to eating problems.
The relationship between impostor phenomenon and career decision-making difficulties among nursing interns: the mediating role of psychological resilience.
He M; Li Y; Hu H; Yu Z; Cai C; Cheng Y; Ma L; Liu S pubmed id: 39664643This study talks about nursing interns who are very important because there aren't enough nurses around the world. These interns sometimes feel like they aren't good enough, which makes it hard for them to decide about their careers. Not much research has been done on what makes it hard for them to make these decisions.
The ability of teleost fishes to recognize individual faces suggests an early evolutionary origin in vertebrates.
Kohda M; Sogawa S; Sowersby W pubmed id: 39664642The research paper talks about how many animals, like primates, birds, and even some fish, can recognize faces. Fish can quickly tell who is who by looking at faces, much like humans do. The study suggests this ability has been around for a very long time, starting with ancient fish.
Validation of the schema coping inventory for dysfunctional coping strategies.
Gazzellini S; Pellegrini V; Napoli E; Ventre V; Lettori D; Castelli E; Basile B; Giacomantonio M pubmed id: 39664641This study looks at how people's early emotional needs and coping styles relate to their feelings and actions. It focuses on a tool called the Schema Coping Inventory (SCI) and tests it with people in Italy.
Affectivity as stance: multimodal stance-taking in audiovisual documentations of Polish and German parliamentary debates.
Müller C; Karpiński M; Kindler-Mathôt C; Klessa K; Jarmołowicz-Nowikow E; Junge JK; Papadopoulou K; Sawicka-Stępińska B pubmed id: 39664640This research paper talks about how we feel when watching videos of political debates in Germany and Poland. The paper shows a new way of studying these feelings by looking at how words, sounds, and gestures together affect us. It helps us understand why watching these debates can change how we feel and see things.
The relationship between physical activity and psychological sub-health among high altitude region Tibetan college students.
Wang S; Niu Z; Xiong J; Chai G; Ye X pubmed id: 39664639The study looked at exercise and mental health in 8,721 college students in Tibet. It found that less exercise and more mental health problems are making students less healthy.
Flashbulb memories in the context of group hierarchies: effects of gender, system justification, and social dominance orientation on negative private and public flashbulb memories.
Çavuşoğlu M; Kuşdil ME pubmed id: 39664638This study looks at special memories called flashbulb memories (FBMs) and how they relate to group behavior and feelings. It found that people remember personal bad news more vividly than big public events, like a coup attempt in Türkiye. The study also shows that some people's views and actions can affect how they remember these events.
Association of grip strength, sleep duration, and comorbidities with depressive symptoms in middle-aged and older patients with chronic lung diseases: a cross-sectional network analysis based on CHARLS data.
Li L; Meng J; Wu Y; Bu X; Gao L; Xiao Z; Chen J pubmed id: 39664637Many people with long-lasting lung problems feel sad, which affects how happy they are with life. This study looks at how strong a person's grip is, how long they sleep, and other health issues affect feeling sad in people with lung problems.
Mediator role of psychological resilience between post-traumatic stress symptoms and burnout in academicians affected by the earthquakes in Türkiye.
Yetkin Tekin A pubmed id: 39664636This study looks at how being strong in tough times can help teachers who are stressed from earthquakes not feel too tired or burned out. It focuses on teachers in Türkiye who were affected by earthquakes in February 2023.
Number of translations and translation direction in masked translation priming: evidence from unbalanced English-Chinese bilinguals.
Zhao Q; Li J; Xiong W; Xing H pubmed id: 39664635This study looked at how people who speak two languages remember words in both languages. They found that when there was only one way to translate a word, people remembered it better, and they remembered words better going from their first language to their second language. Different models were used to explain why this happens.
Does sibling family structure matter in the emotion understanding development in preschoolers?
Aslanova M; Gavrilova M; Iurina E pubmed id: 39664634The study looked at how having brothers or sisters affects how kids aged 5-6 understand feelings. It found that having a younger sibling and being flexible in thinking helps kids understand emotions better, but having siblings doesn't change their understanding over a year. This information is useful for parents and teachers to help kids grow emotionally through activities with siblings and friends.
A blended group intervention to promote social connectedness and wellbeing among international university students: an exploratory study.
Cipolletta S; Tedoldi I; Tomaino SCM pubmed id: 39664633Many students from other countries feel lonely because of different cultures and languages. This study tests a program to help these students make friends and feel better.
Gender and family-role portrayals of autism in British newspapers: An intersectional corpus-based study.
Karaminis T; Gabrielatos C; Maden-Weinberger U; Beattie G pubmed id: 39660691A study looked at how British newspapers talk about autism, focusing on boys and girls and their parents. It found that newspapers often discuss autism negatively and focus more on boys than girls. Mothers are more often blamed for their child's autism than fathers, and autistic mothers are usually talked about in a negative way.
Associations of maternal peripregnancy cannabis use with behavioral and developmental outcomes in children with and without symptoms of autism spectrum disorder: Study to Explore Early Development.
DiGuiseppi C; Crume T; Holst B; Aiona K; Van Dyke J; Croen LA; Daniels JL; Friedman S; Sabourin KR; Schieve LA; Wiggins L; Windham GC; Robinson Rosenberg C pubmed id: 39660543Some kids whose moms used cannabis before and during pregnancy showed more signs of autism and had problems like sleeping and being more aggressive. But kids without autism signs weren't affected the same way. Researchers say we need more studies to understand how cannabis affects kids differently.
The chain-mediating effects of negative physical sensation and experiential avoidance on exercise anxiety in college students.
Wang Y; Tian J; Yang Q pubmed id: 39660271The study looked at how feeling bad physically and trying to avoid those feelings could explain the link between doing endurance exercise and feeling anxious about exercise in university students.
College students' psychology and behavior in the context of online public opinion: a cross-sectional study in Jiangsu Province, China.
Chen X; Wu Q; Yin D pubmed id: 39660270College students can be easily influenced by what people say online because they are learning about themselves. With many people using the Internet and social media, what others say can really change how college students think and act.
Being a Pakistani mother in Catalonia: a mixed methods study.
El Khayat M; Rivero M; Anguera MT pubmed id: 39660269The study looks at how moving to a new country changes the way Pakistani families take care of their kids. It tries to find out differences in parenting between their home country and the new place they live. It also explores how they use different resources to help with parenting.
The function(s) of consciousness: an evolutionary perspective.
Lacalli T pubmed id: 39660268The paper talks about why consciousness is important and what it does. It says consciousness helps us change our behaviors quickly and remember things, which can keep us safe. It also mentions that consciousness might help us understand the world better by giving meaning to what we see and feel.
Do problematic gamblers and loot boxers share similar fallacies of thought? A comparative analysis of cognitive biases.
Sanmartín FJ; Velasco J; Gálvez-Lara M; Cuadrado F; Moriana JA pubmed id: 39660267This study looked at how people think when they gamble or use loot boxes in games. It found that people who gamble a lot and those who use loot boxes have similar ways of thinking, like expecting good outcomes, but only gamblers felt more unable to stop. Both groups showed more of these thoughts compared to people who don't gamble much.
'God is always on my side': internal and external predictors of workplace bullying targets' help-seeking behavior in a religious context.
Deikus M; Vveinhardt J pubmed id: 39660265This study looks at how people who have been bullied at work decide to get help from their religious community. It found that how people feel about their religious group helps them make this decision more than their access to counseling or personal beliefs. The research suggests that religious groups could play an important role in helping those who are bullied.
Benefiting from binary negations? Verbal negations decrease visual attention and balance its distribution.
Banh NC; Tünnermann J; Rohlfing KJ; Scharlau I pubmed id: 39660264Negated statements are harder to process than regular statements. Over time, repeating negations helps a little, but not as much as regular statements. In experiments, negations made attention split between different things and didn't focus well.
The impact of challenge and hindrance stressors on knowledge hiding: the mediating role of job crafting and work withdrawal.
Wang L; Jia Y; Xie K pubmed id: 39660262The study looked at how work stress affects teachers not wanting to share what they know. Stress that makes work harder made teachers hide what they knew more. Also, how teachers handle their jobs and their leaders’ support changes this effect.
A systematic comparison of intercultural and indigenous cultural dance education from a global perspective (2010-2024).
Liu W; Xue H; Wang ZY pubmed id: 39660261The study looks at how cultural dance helps people feel connected and understand different cultures. It talks about how dance is taught in different parts of the world, comparing multicultural and local dance education. The research finds that while both focus on sharing culture and teaching diversity, they differ in how they deal with cultural identity and teaching styles.
Comparing self-regulation strategies among adult learners from Poland, Serbia, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic.
Vaculíková J pubmed id: 39660260The study looked at how people control themselves to reach goals and used a special questionnaire to examine this in different countries. The results showed that people do better at self-regulation as they get older, have more education, and are more motivated, but there were no differences between men and women. They also found that the questionnaire works well for comparing people from different countries.
Incorporating peer feedback in academic writing: a systematic review of benefits and challenges.
Wei Y; Liu D pubmed id: 39660258This study looks at how getting feedback from other students can help with writing better in school. It found 16 good things about this kind of feedback and also found some challenges. The study suggests more research on older students and different ways to measure feedback effects.
Parental rejection and internalizing/externalizing problems among left-behind children: the moderating role of interpersonal harmony in class.
Liu Z; Zhao Z; Chen H pubmed id: 39660257Some kids have to live away from their parents for a long time. This can make them feel sad or cause problems with behavior. The study looked at how feeling rejected by parents can lead to these problems and how being friends with classmates might help.
Lifetime stressor exposure is related to suicidality in autistic adults: A multinational study.
Moseley RL; Hedley D; Gamble-Turner JM; Uljarević M; Bury SM; Shields GS; Trollor JN; Stokes MA; Slavich GM pubmed id: 39655441The study looked at stress and how it relates to suicidal thoughts in autistic people. It found that autistic men and women experience different kinds of stress, and these stresses affect them differently. Research showed that losing loved ones troubled men more, while physically dangerous situations troubled women the most.
The associations between child behavioral problems, parents' emotional regulation difficulties, and parental burnout among Israeli parents of children with autism during wartime.
Shnitzer-Meirovich S; Aviad S; Bechar-Katz I; Araten-Bergman T; Shenaar-Golan V; Gur A pubmed id: 39654942Parents of kids with Autism may feel really tired and stressed during tough times like war. If parents can handle their emotions well, it might help them not feel so burned out. This study looks at how kids' behavior and parents' feelings are connected when things get hard.
Understanding the role of cognitive constructs employed in reading in global math and science achievement.
Arastaman G; Bulus M; Kontaş H; Özcan B pubmed id: 39654941The study looked at data from 71 countries to see how reading skills like finding information and understanding can impact math and science success. They found that these reading skills explained a big part of the differences in math and science scores in different countries. This means schools might want to use reading-related skills to help improve math and science learning.
The neural basis underlying the association between parents' socioeconomic status and depressive symptoms among college students.
Xiao Y; Jiang X; Li Y; Mao Y; Zhou D pubmed id: 39654940The study looks at how a family's wealth affects college students feeling sad. It also wants to see the role of brain connections in this.
Changes in employment psychology of Chinese university students during the two stages of COVID-19 control and their impacts on their employment intentions.
Zheng S; Yan Y pubmed id: 39654939The COVID-19 pandemic has caused a lot of problems for students in college when it comes to getting jobs. These issues are being studied more closely now to help students find work.
From spatial perception to referential meaning: convergent image schemas in the music of and texts about Beethoven's piano sonatas.
Antović M; Jovanović VŽ; Popović M pubmed id: 39654938This research paper looks at how certain ideas, called "schemas," show up in music and the way people talk about music. The study found these patterns in both Beethoven's music and in books about his music, suggesting that even if music and language are different, they often share similar meanings.
Effects of positive education intervention on growth mindset and resilience among boarding middle school adolescents in China: a randomized controlled trial.
Jianping G; Roslan S; Soh KG; Zaremohzzabieh Z pubmed id: 39654937This study looks at how helping kids feel more positive can make them better at working through challenges and thinking they can get smarter. It focuses on kids at a boarding school in China and uses a plan called the PERMA model.
6-Fold path to self-forgiveness: an interdisciplinary model for the treatment of moral injury with intervention strategies for clinicians.
DeMarco MJ pubmed id: 39654935The paper talks about how feeling really guilty can hurt a person inside and make them feel alone. It introduces a way called the 6-Fold Path to Self-Forgiveness, which uses writing and other activities to help people feel better and fix their relationships.
Virtual reality vs. imagery: comparing approaches in guided meditation.
Jo M; Kim E; Lee J pubmed id: 39654934This study looked at how using virtual reality or traditional methods for meditation affects stress and focus in adults from South Korea. It also checked if people who are new to meditation focus differently than those who are experienced.
Grandmothers matter: how grandmothers promote maternal perinatal mental health and child development.
Riem MME; van der Straaten M pubmed id: 39654933Having support from family like grandparents can help moms stay mentally healthy when having a baby. Grandparents can also help in making babies and children healthier. Scientists want to learn more about how grandparents can help moms and kids.
Prime effects in metaphor comprehension: comparing congruent and opposite schematic primes.
Khatin-Zadeh O; Farsani D; Eskandari Z; Li L; Banaruee H pubmed id: 39654932This study looked at how different kinds of hints, or "primes," help people understand metaphors. It found that when the hint or prime matched the metaphor, people understood it faster, but when it was the opposite, it slowed them down. The same happened whether the prime was a word or a gesture.
knowledge translation performances for public engagement on Parkinson's disease and dementia.
Kuhlmann N; Thomas A; Incio-Serra N; Blain-Moraes S pubmed id: 39654931Some people feel left out because health research usually focuses on finding cures rather than understanding what it is like to have a disease like Parkinson's or dementia. This problem gets worse because the information is hard to understand for people who are not researchers, making it difficult for everyone to talk and learn from each other.
Visual insights into translation: demystifying trends of adopting eye-tracking techniques in translation studies.
Li Y; Zhong Z pubmed id: 39654929Eye-tracking is a tool used to study how translators work and think. It's becoming important in learning how people translate languages.
Loss of empathy in stroke.
Tang WK; Hui E; Leung TWH pubmed id: 39654928Some people who have a stroke lose empathy, but it often goes unnoticed and untreated. The study will look at how this loss is connected to brain scans and how it affects loved ones over a year.
Anxiety and depression in first-year university students: the role of family and social support.
Estrella-Proaño A; Rivadeneira MF; Alvarado J; Murtagh M; Guijarro S; Alomoto L; Cañarejo G pubmed id: 39649784Many teenagers and young people feel very anxious and sad. This study looked at how many first-year college students feel this way and how it might be connected to their family life and friends' support.
Perceived social support and deviant behavior of new street corner youth on campus: a moderated mediation model.
Chi H; Fan L; Meng W pubmed id: 39649783The study looked at how young people acting out at school might be helped by feeling supported by others. It also checked how needing to connect with others and finding meaning in life could change how these young people behave.
Physical activity promotes the development of cognitive ability in adolescents: the chain mediating role based on self-education expectations and learning behaviors.
Cui L; Xing Y; Zhou H; Qian J; Li J; Shen F; Bu Y pubmed id: 39649782The study found that exercising helps kids think better, especially those who might need more help with their thinking skills. Exercise not only helps directly but also makes kids want to learn more and act better in their schooling, which helps their thinking too.
Impact of children's purported past-life memories: a follow-up investigation of American cases.
Pehlivanova M; Cozzolino PJ; Tucker JB pubmed id: 39649781Some kids between ages 3 and 6 talk about memories from past lives. Researchers know a lot about these memories when kids are young. But they don't know much about what happens to these kids as they grow up or how it affects their lives.
Symbolic representation by a two-dimensional matrix for profiling comparative animal behavior.
Irwin LN pubmed id: 39649780Some scientists think animals might experience the world in different ways, just like people do. The scientist in this paper came up with a new way to study animals by looking at how they choose to do things, work with others, and control themselves. This helps scientists see what animals might feel and how they're similar or different from each other.
Self-perceived physical fitness as a moderating variable in the relationship between motor self-efficacy and physical self-concept in school-age physical education students.
Galán-Arroyo C; Mayordomo-Pinilla N; Castillo-Paredes A; Rojo-Ramos J pubmed id: 39649779Young people are having more mental health problems, so researchers want to help by getting them to move their bodies more. Feeling confident about how good they are at sports and other physical activities can help their mental health, too. This study looked at how students feel about their fitness in gym class and how that helps their self-confidence and how they see themselves physically.
New approaches to the single-interval adjustment matrix yes-no task.
Shepherd D; Hautus MJ pubmed id: 39649778Researchers tested two new ways to improve a task that helps find the quietest sound someone can hear. One new method, SIAM-TT, uses two tracks in one trial to make the process faster, while the other, SIAM-Rating, uses a scale with more options. These methods were proven effective and efficient in helping measure how well people can detect sounds.