Examining the Longitudinal Associations between Adjustment Disorder Symptoms and Boredom during COVID-19
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] J. Danckert,et al. Boredom Proneness and Rule-Breaking: A Persistent Relation One Year into the COVID-19 Pandemic , 2022, Behavioral sciences.
[2] S. Cipolletta,et al. PTSD is not the emblematic disorder of the COVID-19 pandemic; adjustment disorder is , 2022, BMC Psychiatry.
[3] Megan E. Patrick,et al. Increased nicotine vaping due to the COVID-19 pandemic among US young adults: Associations with nicotine dependence, vaping frequency, and reasons for use , 2022, Preventive Medicine.
[4] J. Spence,et al. Relationships Between Physical Activity, Boredom Proneness, and Subjective Well-Being Among U.K. Adults During the COVID-19 Pandemic. , 2022, Journal of sport & exercise psychology.
[5] Songli Mei,et al. Psychological distress and internet addiction following the COVID-19 outbreak: Fear of missing out and boredom proneness as mediators , 2022, Archives of Psychiatric Nursing.
[6] Elizabeth W. Dunn,et al. Mental Health During the First Year of the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Review and Recommendations for Moving Forward , 2022, Perspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
[7] M. Judah,et al. Loneliness and Depression in College Students During the COVID-19 Pandemic: the Role of Boredom and Repetitive Negative Thinking , 2021, International Journal of Cognitive Therapy.
[8] A. Fiocco,et al. Stress and Adjustment during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study on the Lived Experience of Canadian Older Adults , 2021, International journal of environmental research and public health.
[9] P. Courtet,et al. Psychological state of a sample of patients with mood disorders during the first French COVID-19 lockdown , 2021, Scientific Reports.
[10] Lucy Popova,et al. “I’m Bored and I’m Stressed”: A Qualitative Study of Exclusive Smokers, ENDS Users, and Transitioning Smokers or ENDS Users in the Time of COVID-19 , 2021, Nicotine & tobacco research : official journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco.
[11] W. Wolff,et al. Bored by bothering? A cost-value approach to pandemic boredom , 2021, Humanities and Social Sciences Communications.
[12] A. Maercker,et al. Preoccupation as psychopathological process and symptom in adjustment disorder: A scoping review , 2021, Clinical psychology & psychotherapy.
[13] Elena Stănculescu,et al. Post-Lockdown Effects on Students’ Mental Health in Romania: Perceived Stress, Missing Daily Social Interactions, and Boredom Proneness , 2021, International journal of environmental research and public health.
[14] G. Knell,et al. COVID-19 related employment change is associated with increased alcohol consumption during the pandemic , 2021, The American journal of drug and alcohol abuse.
[15] Abigail A. Scholer,et al. Boredom proneness, political orientation and adherence to social-distancing in the pandemic , 2021, Motivation and Emotion.
[16] K. Rice,et al. Measuring COVID-19 Stressors and Their Impact: The Second-Order Factor Model and Its Four First-Order Factors: Infection Fears, Economic, Grief, and Lockdown Stressors , 2021, Journal of Loss and Trauma.
[17] H. Budde,et al. Physical Activity, Boredom and Fear of COVID-19 Among Adolescents in Germany , 2021, Frontiers in Psychology.
[18] Halim Guner. Moderator effect of COVID-19 fear on “mediating role of boredom proneness in relationship between internet addiction and DASS-21” , 2021, Educational Process: International Journal.
[19] Olivia J. Kirtley,et al. Suicide trends in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic: an interrupted time-series analysis of preliminary data from 21 countries , 2021, The Lancet Psychiatry.
[20] Lindsey M. Rodriguez,et al. Examining Associations Between Social Networking Site Alcohol-Specific Social Norms, Posting Behavior, and Drinking to Cope During the COVID-19 Pandemic , 2021, Cyberpsychology Behav. Soc. Netw..
[21] G. Katul,et al. Intensity and frequency of extreme novel epidemics , 2021, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[22] D. A. Fagbenro,et al. Predictive Role of Boredom Proneness and Self-Efficacy on Perceived Stress among Civil Servants Working from Home during COVID-19 Lockdown , 2021 .
[23] E. Riggle,et al. Understanding Alcohol and Marijuana Use among Sexual Minority Women during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Descriptive Phenomenological Study , 2021, Journal of homosexuality.
[24] V. Ardino,et al. Risk and protective factors, stressors, and symptoms of adjustment disorder during the COVID-19 pandemic – First results of the ESTSS COVID-19 pan-European ADJUST study , 2021, European journal of psychotraumatology.
[25] M. Shevlin,et al. Adjustment disorder, traumatic stress, depression and anxiety in Poland during an early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic , 2021, European journal of psychotraumatology.
[26] M. Mahoney,et al. The Perceived Impact of COVID-19 among Treatment-Seeking Smokers: A Mixed Methods Approach , 2021, International journal of environmental research and public health.
[27] Melissa L. Finucane,et al. A longitudinal study of psychological distress in the United States before and during the COVID-19 pandemic , 2020, Preventive Medicine.
[28] Abigail A. Scholer,et al. Boredom in the COVID-19 pandemic: Trait boredom proneness, the desire to act, and rule-breaking , 2020, Personality and Individual Differences.
[29] W. Wolff,et al. If-then planning, self-control, and boredom as predictors of adherence to social distancing guidelines: Evidence from a two-wave longitudinal study with a behavioral intervention , 2020, Current Psychology.
[30] J. Eastwood. Self-focused but lacking self-insight: The relationship between boredom and self- consciousness , 2021 .
[31] P. Huguet,et al. Time and Emotion During Lockdown and the Covid-19 Epidemic: Determinants of Our Experience of Time? , 2021, Frontiers in Psychology.
[32] Crystal L. Park,et al. Measuring Cumulative Stressfulness: Psychometric Properties of the COVID-19 Stressors Scale , 2020, Health education & behavior : the official publication of the Society for Public Health Education.
[33] J. Danckert,et al. Boredom Proneness and Self-Control as Unique Risk Factors in Achievement Settings , 2020, International journal of environmental research and public health.
[34] S. Sonnenschein,et al. Alcohol Consumption during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Cross-Sectional Survey of US Adults , 2020, International journal of environmental research and public health.
[35] Jianhui Wu,et al. The relationship between perceived stress and emotional distress during the COVID-19 outbreak: Effects of boredom proneness and coping style , 2020, Journal of Anxiety Disorders.
[36] E. Robinson,et al. Psychological distress and adaptation to the COVID-19 crisis in the United States , 2020, Journal of Psychiatric Research.
[37] B. Hall,et al. Psychological distress and state boredom during the COVID-19 outbreak in China: the role of meaning in life and media use , 2020, European journal of psychotraumatology.
[38] A. Terracciano,et al. The trajectory of loneliness in response to COVID-19. , 2020, The American psychologist.
[39] P. Huguet,et al. Time and Covid-19 stress in the lockdown situation: Time free, «Dying» of boredom and sadness , 2020, PloS one.
[40] J. Schüler,et al. High Boredom Proneness and Low Trait Self-Control Impair Adherence to Social Distancing Guidelines during the COVID-19 Pandemic , 2020, International journal of environmental research and public health.
[41] Gordon T. Kraft-Todd,et al. Evaluating COVID-19 Public Health Messaging in Italy: Self-Reported Compliance and Growing Mental Health Concerns , 2020, medRxiv.
[42] M. Wittmann,et al. What happens while waiting? How self-regulation affects boredom and subjective time during a real waiting situation. , 2020, Acta psychologica.
[43] M. O'Donnell,et al. Adjustment Disorder: Current Developments and Future Directions , 2019, International journal of environmental research and public health.
[44] J. Eastwood,et al. Boredom Is a Feeling of Thinking and a Double-Edged Sword , 2019, Boredom Is in Your Mind.
[45] James Danckert,et al. A Failure to Launch: Regulatory Modes and Boredom Proneness , 2018, Front. Psychol..
[46] E. Igou,et al. Situational meaninglessness and state boredom: Cross-sectional and experience-sampling findings , 2018 .
[47] Andreas Elpidorou. The good of boredom , 2018 .
[48] Eric D. Heggestad,et al. Intra-individual Response Variability as an Indicator of Insufficient Effort Responding: Comparison to Other Indicators and Relationships with Individual Differences , 2018 .
[49] A. Maercker,et al. A Brief Measure of the International Classification of Diseases-11 Adjustment Disorder: Investigation of Psychometric Properties in an Adult Help-Seeking Sample , 2018, Psychopathology.
[50] J. Eastwood,et al. Boredom: What Is It Good For? , 2018 .
[51] J. Danckert,et al. Cognitive and affective predictors of boredom proneness , 2017, Cognition & emotion.
[52] E. Igou,et al. Boredom Increases Impulsiveness: A Meaning-Regulation Perspective , 2017 .
[53] E. Igou,et al. Boredom Begs to Differ: Differentiation From Other Negative Emotions , 2017, Emotion.
[54] Abigail A. Scholer,et al. A self-regulatory approach to understanding boredom proneness , 2016, Cognition & emotion.
[55] K. Felmingham,et al. A Longitudinal Study of Adjustment Disorder After Trauma Exposure. , 2016, The American journal of psychiatry.
[56] C. Nederkoorn,et al. Self-inflicted pain out of boredom , 2016, Psychiatry Research.
[57] C. Nederkoorn,et al. Eating and inflicting pain out of boredom , 2015, Appetite.
[58] Timothy D. Wilson,et al. Just think: The challenges of the disengaged mind , 2014, Science.
[59] R Core Team,et al. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. , 2014 .
[60] J. Eastwood,et al. The Measurement of Boredom , 2013, Assessment.
[61] C. Brewin,et al. Diagnosis and classification of disorders specifically associated with stress: proposals for ICD‐11 , 2013, World psychiatry : official journal of the World Psychiatric Association.
[62] J. Eastwood,et al. Development and Validation of the Multidimensional State Boredom Scale , 2013, Assessment.
[63] Wijnand A.P. van Tilburg,et al. On boredom: Lack of challenge and meaning as distinct boredom experiences , 2011, Motivation and Emotion.
[64] Yves Rosseel,et al. lavaan: An R Package for Structural Equation Modeling , 2012 .
[65] A. Maercker,et al. Development and validation of a self-report for the assessment of adjustment disorders , 2010, Psychology, health & medicine.
[66] M. Steger,et al. Posttraumatic stress disorder, guilt, depression, and meaning in life among military veterans. , 2009, Journal of traumatic stress.
[67] J. Eastwood,et al. Does a lack of life meaning cause boredom? Results from psychometric, longitudinal, and experimental analyses. , 2009 .
[68] Hadley Wickham,et al. Reshaping Data with the reshape Package , 2007 .
[69] N. Krause. Evaluating the Stress-Buffering Function of Meaning in Life Among Older People , 2007, Journal of aging and health.
[70] M. K. Moran,et al. Understanding, compliance and psychological impact of the SARS quarantine experience , 2007, Epidemiology and Infection.
[71] T. A. Pychyl,et al. Volitional action and inaction in the lives of undergraduate students: State orientation, procrastination and proneness to boredom , 1998 .