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Gender differences in rumination: A meta-analysis.

TLDR
Although statistically significant, the effect sizes for gender differences in rumination were small in magnitude and there was no evidence of heterogeneity or publication bias across studies for these effect sizes.
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This article is published in Personality and Individual Differences.The article was published on 2013-08-01 and is currently open access. It has received 428 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Rumination.

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Social worker stress and an online meditation programme

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the impact of a three-month online meditation program for geriatric social workers in South Asian cities for mitigating stress, improving performance and reducing depression.
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Psychometric Properties of the Swedish Version of the Brief Repetitive Thinking Questionnaire (RTQ-10): An Internet-Based Study on Degrees of Affective Symptoms and Levels of Distress.

TL;DR: This study showed that the Swedish version of the brief Repetitive Thinking Questionnaire is robust in a population with various degrees of affective symptoms and distress, and provides additional psychometric support for the RTQ-10 as a transdiagnostic measure.
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Gender and age differences in forgivingness in Italian and Polish samples

TL;DR: In this article , the authors explored gender and age differences in forgivingness using the crosscultural and stress-and-coping perspective using the Heartland Forgiveness Scale (HFS) and found that older adults were more forgiving than young respondents.

Genetic Influence on Resilience to Potentially Traumatic Events

Kosuke Niitsu
TL;DR: In this article, a concept analysis was conducted to better understand the meaning of resilience and its relationship to both intrapersonal and environmental variables, including ego-resiliency, emotion regulation, social support, and heredity, and the consequences were none to mild psychopathological symptoms and positive adaptation.
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Which comes first? Modeling the longitudinal association between mindfulness and neuroticism

TL;DR: In this paper , a four-wave longitudinal study examined whether within-person changes in mindfulness precede or follow changes in neuroticism in a large sample of Chinese college students (Wave 1: Mage = 21.12 ± 1.45, 60.7% female, N = 1074).
References
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Book

Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences

TL;DR: The concepts of power analysis are discussed in this paper, where Chi-square Tests for Goodness of Fit and Contingency Tables, t-Test for Means, and Sign Test are used.
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Quantifying heterogeneity in a meta‐analysis

TL;DR: It is concluded that H and I2, which can usually be calculated for published meta-analyses, are particularly useful summaries of the impact of heterogeneity, and one or both should be presented in publishedMeta-an analyses in preference to the test for heterogeneity.
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Trim and fill: A simple funnel-plot-based method of testing and adjusting for publication bias in meta-analysis.

TL;DR: In this paper, a rank-based data augmentation technique is proposed for estimating the number of missing studies that might exist in a meta-analysis and the effect that these studies might have had on its outcome.
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Responses to depression and their effects on the duration of depressive episodes.

TL;DR: The authors proposed that the ways people respond to their own symptoms of depression influence the duration of these symptoms and found that people who engage in ruminative responses to depression, focusing on their symptoms and the possible causes and consequences of their symptoms, will show longer depressions than people who take action to distract themselves from their symptoms.
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Rumination reconsidered: A psychometric analysis.

TL;DR: In an attempt to eliminate similar item content as an alternative explanation for the relation between depression and rumination, a secondary analysis was conducted using the data from S. Nolen-Hoeksema, J. Larson, and C. Grayson as mentioned in this paper.
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