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Showing papers by "Erin Michelle Buchanan published in 2014"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the factor structure of the 20-item SONG test via exploratory and confirmatory factor-analytic procedures and found that the first factor yielded reliable scores that correlated significantly and in the expected direction with measures of well-being and psychological distress.
Abstract: This study’s primary purpose was to examine the factor structure of the 20-item Seeking of Noetic Goals (SONG) test via exploratory and confirmatory factor-analytic procedures. An additional objective was to report on the measure’s incremental validity in comparison to the Search scale of the Meaning in Life Questionnaire (MLQ), an alternative measure of search for meaning. This study utilized data from three samples of American undergraduates (N = 908) from a medium-sized southern university. Factor analysis supported a two-factor model of the SONG, with patterns of correlation further suggesting the measure assesses distinct constructs. Multi-group confirmatory factor analysis indicated similar scale structure and item answering in terms of gender. Overall, the first factor yielded reliable scores that correlated significantly and in the expected direction with measures of well-being and psychological distress. The second factor did not yield reliable scores nor did it correlate significantly with many of the other measures administered. However, both factors were shown to significantly predict scores from measures of depression and general psychological distress after controlling for MLQ Search scale scores. We consider the data with respect to SONG scoring and interpretation, and discuss implications of these data for future research.

22 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article examined the impact of the Gulf Oil Spill and Hurricane Katrina, environmental attitudes, and environmental action among residents of the Mississippi Gulf Coast, and found that disaster impact was correlated with environmental worry, connection to nature, and action.
Abstract: The current study examined the impact of the Gulf Oil Spill and Hurricane Katrina, environmental attitudes, and environmental action among residents of the Mississippi Gulf Coast. The authors sought to determine if disaster impact, worry about the environment, or connection to nature was associated with environmental action following the oil spill and in general. We hypothesized that disaster impact and environmental attitudes would be significantly associated with environmental action. Surveys were administered to 1,108 individuals receiving mental health services in connection with the Gulf Oil Spill. Results indicated that disaster impact was correlated with environmental worry, connection to nature, and action. Additionally, environmental worry and connection to nature were significantly associated with action, as were the effects of Hurricane Katrina to a lesser degree. This study supplements the existing literature by examining environmental attitudes, disaster impact, and their association with environmental action following two disasters.

14 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Examining word usage across 24 highand low-status informative blogs with differing topics found blog dissimilarities that may indicate key distinctions in style and linguistic usage that differentiate both topic and status of the blog.
Abstract: Researchers and directories have difficulty classifying blogs into categories resulting from the rate at which blogs are created, as well as the overlap in content. Further, although blog popularity may be apparent in Internet traffic, the determinants of authority or status of a blog have yet to be explored. This article examined how word content affected blog status through several linguistic analyses by examining word usage across 24 highand low-status informative blogs with differing topics: politics, technology, entertainment, and business. We compared the frequency of parts of speech, the frequency of unique words, and the use of low-frequency words and found blog dissimilarities that may indicate key distinctions in style and linguistic usage that differentiate both topic and status of the blog.

4 citations


01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: Schulenberg et al. as discussed by the authors developed a short form of the Purpose in Life test (PIL) by using exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis, which was used to evaluate a person's perceived meaning in life.
Abstract: This article discusses the development of a short form of the Purpose in Life test (PIL) by using exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis. We describe why the creation of a useful, separate scale for measuring only meaning in life was desirable. The analyses used here, while normally complex, are broken down into manageable research questions that will show you how to interpret factor analyses and use these results in future endeavors. We first analyzed the original, 20-item version of the Purpose in Life test to determine which items would be the most beneficial at assessing meaning. Those items were examined in a second set of studies to analyze reliability of the proposed short form, which was revealed to be a handy tool for evaluating a person’s perceived meaning in life. Meaning (or lack thereof) is an important concept, which is related to positive and negative variables, such as happiness, life satisfaction, depression, and drug use. You will learn about the challenges and advantages to using factor analysis, and why it is an essential statistical procedure for researchers who are interested in scale development, validation, and refinement. This article is an extension of material originally presented by Schulenberg, Buchanan, and colleagues. Contributor biographies Erin M. Buchanan is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Missouri State University. She has an undergraduate degree in psychology from Texas A&M University, and her master’s degree and Ph.D. from Texas Tech University. Her research specialties include applied statistics with a focus on scale development and validation, as well as research on new statistical procedures and their implementation in the social sciences. She mainly teaches undergraduate and graduate statistics courses that cover the whole range of types of statistics, including structural equation modeling. Finally, she also is interested in understanding the underlying structure of our language systems and how those systems interaction with our ability to make judgments about the relationships between words. Kathrene D. Valentine is currently an Adjunct Instructor at Missouri State University. She has an undergraduate degree in psychology and a master’s degree in experimental psychology from Missouri State University. Her research interests include the importance of properly applied statistics in the social sciences with an emphasis on non-null hypothesis significance testing techniques, power and effect size, replication, and new statistical technologies. She teaches undergraduate introductory statistics courses. Stefan E. Schulenberg (Ph.D., Clinical Psychology-Clinical/Disaster Specialty Track, University of South Dakota, 2001) is a licensed psychologist in the state of Mississippi and an Associate Professor in the University of Mississippi’s Psychology Department. Dr. Schulenberg teaches graduate courses in cognitive assessment, personality assessment, and disaster mental health, as well as undergraduate courses in disasters and mental health, positive psychology, psychology and law, abnormal psychology, and tests and measurements. His research interests include clinical-disaster psychology, meaning and purpose in life, positive psychology, psychological assessment, serious mental illness, and adolescent psychopathology in the legal context. Dr. Schulenberg co-organizes Out of the Darkness community walks with the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention and serves as a disaster mental health volunteer in the American Red Cross. He was a mental health consultant for a research grant issued in response to Hurricane Katrina, and recently conducted evaluation research funded by the Mississippi Department of Mental Health relating to the effects of the Gulf Oil Spill. Dr. Schulenberg also serves as the Director of the University of Mississippi’s Clinical-Disaster Research Center (UM-CDRC), an integrated research, teaching, training, and service Center with a primary emphasis in disaster mental health and a related emphasis in positive psychology. Relevant disciplines

3 citations