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Yuta Chishima

Researcher at University of Tsukuba

Publications -  19
Citations -  120

Yuta Chishima is an academic researcher from University of Tsukuba. The author has contributed to research in topics: Life satisfaction & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 14 publications receiving 61 citations. Previous affiliations of Yuta Chishima include Wilfrid Laurier University & Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.

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The Influence of Self-Compassion on Cognitive Appraisals and Coping with Stressful Events

TL;DR: This article investigated the influence of self-compassion on stress coping processes using a short longitudinal design and found that selfcompassion promoted adaptive coping via reduced threat toward and greater controllability of the stressful event.
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Conversation with a future self: A letter-exchange exercise enhances student self-continuity, career planning, and academic thinking

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors tested a method to foster self-continuity in students planning future academic and career pursuits. But they did not consider the impact of self-reflection on future self-confidence.
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The Japanese Version of the Adolescent Time Inventory-Time Attitudes (ATI-TA) Scale: Internal Consistency, Structural Validity, and Convergent Validity.

TL;DR: The results provide evidence that scores on the Japanese version of the Adolescent Time Inventory–Time Attitudes are reliable and valid, and thus potentially useful for research in this cultural context.
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The reliability and validity of the Temporal Focus Scale in young Japanese adults

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the reliability and validity of the temporal focus scale scores in a sample of 977 young Japanese adults, aged 18-24 years old, and found that a future focus was more strongly correlated with career efficacy than a past or current focus.
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The generalizability of temporal focus profiles across cultures: A secondary analysis using data from Japan and the United Kingdom

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the feasibility of person-centered analyses using the temporal focus scale across cultures, and assessed how temporal focus clusters relate to criterion variables, finding that a four cluster solution was best in both countries, with three broadly similar clusters emerging across the two sites.