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Inge Seiffge-Krenke Roberta Molinar Sylvia Ciariano Palma Menna Gregory Michel Elsa Hoareau Marion Kloep Leo B. Hendry 《Journal of Happiness Studies》2010,11(6):703-720
The present study investigated how European adolescents cope with perceived future-related stress. Altogether 3,154 adolescents
(mean age of 15 years) from four countries (n = 1,071 Italians, n = 1,433 Germans, n = 308 French, and n = 341 British) participated in the study. They completed the Problem Questionnaire, which assesses future-related stress,
and the CASQ, which assesses how three coping styles (active coping, internal coping, and withdrawal) are used to deal with
future-related stress. German and British adolescents showed low levels of stress, whereas French and Italian adolescents
had high levels. All adolescents anticipated future-related problems but did not portray their futures negatively. In addition,
they dealt with future-related stress actively and showed high levels of coping competence. Adolescents used active coping
strategies most frequently, followed by thinking about possible solutions. Dysfunctional coping strategies (e.g., withdrawal)
were used much less often. The effects of age, gender, and family variables on stress perception and coping style were negligible.
Overall, our findings highlight the tenets of positive psychology by revealing that adolescents are concerned about their
futures and that they show high agency in dealing with future-related problems. Further, the findings are relevant for positive
youth development programs, especially those which endorse positive orientation to the future and coping competence. 相似文献
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Individual variability in infant's language processing is partly explained by environmental factors, like the quantity of parental speech input, as well as by infant‐specific factors, like speech production. Here, we explore how these factors affect infant word segmentation. We used an artificial language to ensure that only statistical regularities (like transitional probabilities between syllables) could cue word boundaries, and then asked how the quantity of parental speech input and infants’ babbling repertoire predict infants’ abilities to use these statistical cues. We replicated prior reports showing that 8‐month‐old infants use statistical cues to segment words, with a preference for part‐words over words (a novelty effect). Crucially, 8‐month‐olds with larger novelty effects had received more speech input at 4 months and had greater production abilities at 8 months. These findings establish for the first time that the ability to extract statistical information from speech correlates with individual factors in infancy, like early speech experience and language production. Implications of these findings for understanding individual variability in early language acquisition are discussed. 相似文献
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