86 results on '"Juan Ramón Barrada"'
Search Results
2. Comment on Rodríguez-Cortés et al. Individual Circadian Preference, Eating Disorders and Obesity in Children and Adolescents: A Dangerous Liaison? A Systematic Review and a Meta-Analysis. Children 2022, 9, 167
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José Francisco López-Gil and Juan Ramón Barrada
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chronobiology ,evening chronotype ,morning chronotype ,disordered eating ,other specified feeding or eating disorders ,food addiction ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
This commentary critically examines the article by Rodríguez-Cortés et al. on the links between circadian preferences, eating disorders, and obesity in pediatric populations, emphasizing the association between evening chronotypes and disordered eating behaviors. Key findings highlight the increased prevalence of food addiction (FA) and night eating syndrome (NES) among evening-oriented children and adolescents, though the article’s reliance on studies with adult samples limits the generalizability of its conclusions. Additionally, the ambiguous classification of FA and NES within broader eating disorder frameworks necessitates further investigation to delineate these behaviors from traditional disorders such as anorexia and bulimia nervosa. This commentary advocates for future research focusing on pediatric populations to explore the intersection of circadian misalignment with emotional regulation and environmental factors, aiming to develop tailored preventative strategies that incorporate chronobiological and lifestyle modifications.
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- 2024
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3. Correction: A consensus document on definition and diagnostic criteria for orthorexia nervosa
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Lorenzo M. Donini, Juan Ramón Barrada, Friederike Barthels, Thomas M. Dunn, Camille Babeau, Anna Brytek-Matera, Hellas Cena, Silvia Cerolini, Hye-hyun Cho, Maria Coimbra, Massimo Cuzzolaro, Claudia Ferreira, Valeria Galfano, Maria G. Grammatikopoulou, Souheil Hallit, Linn Håman, Phillipa Hay, Masahito Jimbo, Clotilde Lasson, Eva-Carin Lindgren, Renee McGregor, Marianna Minnetti, Edoardo Mocini, Sahar Obeid, Crystal D. Oberle, Maria-Dolores Onieva-Zafra, Marie-Christine Opitz, María-Laura Parra-Fernández, Reinhard Pietrowsky, Natalija Plasonja, Eleonora Poggiogalle, Adrien Rigó, Rachel F. Rodgers, Maria Roncero, Carmina Saldaña, Cristina Segura-Garcia, Jessica Setnick, Ji-Yeon Shin, Grazia Spitoni, Jana Strahler, Nanette Stroebele-Benschop, Patrizia Todisco, Mariacarolina Vacca, Martina Valente, Màrta Varga, Andrea Zagaria, Hana Flynn Zickgraf, Rebecca C. Reynolds, and Caterina Lombardo
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Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 - Published
- 2023
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4. Differentiating healthy orthorexia from orthorexia nervosa: sociodemographic, psychological and dietary characteristics in a French sample
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Eva Hanras, Emilie Boujut, Juan Ramón Barrada, and Géraldine Dorard
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Orthorexia ,Orthorexia nervosa ,Healthy orthorexia ,Eating disorders ,Healthy eating ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 - Abstract
Abstract Objective: Orthorexia has been widely studied, but recently, a new conceptualisation was proposed to distinguish its healthy characteristics from its pathological ones. The objective of this study was to differentiate healthy orthorexia (HeOr) from orthorexia nervosa (OrNe) by exploring their sociodemographic, psychological, health and dietary characteristics using comparative and correlational statistical methods. Design: Cross-sectional analysis. Participants completed an online, self-administered questionnaire assessing their sociodemographic characteristics, orthorexia, exercise dependence, personality, health anxiety, food choice motives, emotional competences and eating disorders (ED). Setting: Data were collected between May 2021 and September 2022. Participants: 1515 French females (meanage = 37·67). Responses from men were excluded. Results: While OrNe was mainly associated with weight control motives in food choices (r = 0·42), HeOr was more strongly correlated with natural content (r = 0·60) and health motives (r = 0·49). In relation to exercising, OrNe showed its highest association with weight control (r = 0·41). Health anxiety was more strongly associated with OrNe than with HeOr. Both OrNe and HeOr were related to diet adherence and regular exercise, but the association was stronger for the latter. Orthorexia scores, mainly OrNe, were higher in participants at the risk of ED. Participants who were afraid to gain weight showed higher OrNe scores. Conclusions: HeOr seems to be part of a healthy lifestyle in general. In contrast, OrNe falls into the category of an ED and is associated with more problematic psychological functioning. Particular attention should be given to individuals who are beginning to control and reduce their food intake to prevent them from developing OrNe.
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- 2024
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5. Orthorexic eating behaviors are not all pathological: a French validation of the Teruel Orthorexia Scale (TOS)
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Clotilde Lasson, Amélie Rousseau, Siobhan Vicente, Nelly Goutaudier, Lucia Romo, María Roncero, and Juan Ramón Barrada
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Orthorexia ,Healthy orthorexia ,Orthorexia nervosa ,Psychometric evaluation ,Healthy eating ,Eating disorders ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Abstract As no French validated measurement tool distinguishing healthy orthorexia (HeOr) from orthorexia nervosa (OrNe) currently exists, this study aimed at examining psychometric properties of the French version of the Teruel Orthorexia Scale (TOS). A sample of 799 participants (Mean [SD] age: 28.5 [12.1] years-old) completed the French versions of the TOS, the Düsseldorfer Orthorexia Skala, the Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire, and the Obsessive–Compulsive Inventory-Revised. Confirmatory factor analysis and exploratory structural equation modeling (ESEM) were used. Although the bidimensional model, with OrNe and HeOr, of the original 17-item version showed an adequate fit, we suggest excluding items 9 and 15. The bidimensional model for the shortened version provided a satisfactory fit (ESEM model: CFI = .963, TLI = .949, RMSEA = .068). The mean loading was .65 for HeOr and .70 for OrNe. The internal consistency of both dimensions was adequate (αHeOr = .83 and αOrNe = .81). Partial correlations showed that eating disorders and obsessive–compulsive symptomatology measures were positively related to OrNe and unrelated or negatively related to HeOr. The scores from the 15-item French version of the TOS in the current sample appears to present an adequate internal consistency, pattern of associations in line with what was theoretically expected, and promising for differentiating both types of orthorexia in a French population. We discuss why both dimensions of orthorexia should be considered in this area of research.
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- 2023
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6. A consensus document on definition and diagnostic criteria for orthorexia nervosa
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Lorenzo M. Donini, Juan Ramón Barrada, Friederike Barthels, Thomas M. Dunn, Camille Babeau, Anna Brytek-Matera, Hellas Cena, Silvia Cerolini, Hye-hyun Cho, Maria Coimbra, Massimo Cuzzolaro, Claudia Ferreira, Valeria Galfano, Maria G. Grammatikopoulou, Souheil Hallit, Linn Håman, Phillipa Hay, Masahito Jimbo, Clotilde Lasson, Eva-Carin Lindgren, Renee McGregor, Marianna Minnetti, Edoardo Mocini, Sahar Obeid, Crystal D. Oberle, Maria-Dolores Onieva-Zafra, Marie-Christine Opitz, María-Laura Parra-Fernández, Reinhard Pietrowsky, Natalija Plasonja, Eleonora Poggiogalle, Adrien Rigó, Rachel F. Rodgers, Maria Roncero, Carmina Saldaña, Cristina Segura-Garcia, Jessica Setnick, Ji-Yeon Shin, Grazia Spitoni, Jana Strahler, Nanette Stroebele-Benschop, Patrizia Todisco, Mariacarolina Vacca, Martina Valente, Màrta Varga, Andrea Zagaria, Hana Flynn Zickgraf, Rebecca C. Reynolds, and Caterina Lombardo
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Orthorexia nervosa (ON) ,Feeding and eating disorders (F&ED) ,Anorexia nervosa (AN) ,Obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) ,Avoidant restrictive food intake disorder (ARFID) ,Eating disorder ,Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 - Abstract
Abstract Purpose Since the term orthorexia nervosa (ON) was coined from the Greek (ὀρθός, right and ὄρεξις, appetite) in 1997 to describe an obsession with “correct” eating, it has been used worldwide without a consistent definition. Although multiple authors have proposed diagnostic criteria, and many theoretical papers have been published, no consensus definition of ON exists, empirical primary evidence is limited, and ON is not a standardized diagnosis. These gaps prevent research to identify risk and protective factors, pathophysiology, functional consequences, and evidence-based therapeutic treatments. The aims of the current study are to categorize the common observations and presentations of ON pathology among experts in the eating disorder field, propose tentative diagnostic criteria, and consider which DSM chapter and category would be most appropriate for ON should it be included. Methods 47 eating disorder researchers and multidisciplinary treatment specialists from 14 different countries across four continents completed a three-phase modified Delphi process, with 75% agreement determined as the threshold for a statement to be included in the final consensus document. In phase I, participants were asked via online survey to agree or disagree with 67 statements about ON in four categories: A–Definition, Clinical Aspects, Duration; B–Consequences; C–Onset; D–Exclusion Criteria, and comment on their rationale. Responses were used to modify the statements which were then provided to the same participants for phase II, a second round of feedback, again in online survey form. Responses to phase II were used to modify and improve the statements for phase III, in which statements that met the predetermined 75% of agreement threshold were provided for review and commentary by all participants. Results 27 statements met or exceeded the consensus threshold and were compiled into proposed diagnostic criteria for ON. Conclusions This is the first time a standardized definition of ON has been developed from a worldwide, multidisciplinary cohort of experts. It represents a summary of observations, clinical expertise, and research findings from a wide base of knowledge. It may be used as a base for diagnosis, treatment protocols, and further research to answer the open questions that remain, particularly the functional consequences of ON and how it might be prevented or identified and intervened upon in its early stages. Although the participants encompass many countries and disciplines, further research will be needed to determine if these diagnostic criteria are applicable to the experience of ON in geographic areas not represented in the current expert panel. Level of evidence Level V: opinions of expert committees
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- 2022
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7. The relation of orthorexia with lifestyle habits: Arabic versions of the Eating Habits Questionnaire and the Dusseldorf Orthorexia Scale
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Souheil Hallit, Juan Ramón Barrada, Pascale Salameh, Hala Sacre, María Roncero, and Sahar Obeid
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Orthorexia nervosa ,Healthy behaviors ,Alcohol ,Smoking ,Physical activity ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Plain English summary The term “orthorexia nervosa” (OrNe) denotes a possible pathological fixation on a health-conscious diet. Some of the commonly used tools to assess orthorexia nervosa (OrNe) do not allow a meaningful interpretation of the scores or yield mixed results about the dimensions needed to represent orthorexia. In this study, some items were simultaneously tapping both dimensions of orthorexic tendencies, and shorter versions of the DOS and EHQ scales were proposed to offer instruments with a more explicit structure. The final versions still presented high reliabilities. While HeOr was negatively associated with the consumption of unhealthy substances (higher alcohol use disorder, cigarette, and waterpipe dependence), OrNe was positively correlated with these behaviors. After controlling for OrNe or HeOr (partial correlations), the associations were even higher; the pattern of associations was more explicit, showing the importance of considering the multidimensional structure of orthorexia.
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- 2021
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8. Personality Profile in Orthorexia Nervosa and Healthy Orthorexia
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María Roncero, Juan Ramón Barrada, Gemma García-Soriano, and Verónica Guillén
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orthorexia nervosa ,healthy orthorexia ,personality profile ,neuroticism ,Disinhibition ,psychoticism ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Little is known about orthorexia in both its pathological (orthorexia nervosa, OrNe) and adaptive (healthy orthorexia, HeOr) forms. To date, few studies have been carried out to analyze the personality profile associated with orthorexia, and the results have been contradictory. The aim of the present study was to explore the characteristic pathological personality traits associated with OrNe and HeOr. A total of 297 participants (Mage = 30.8 years; 94.6% women) from the general population completed the Teruel Orthorexia Scale (TOS) and Personality Inventory for DSM-5-Short Form (PID-5-SF) questionnaires. Results showed significant low-medium correlations between OrNe and the four personality factors (Negative Affectivity, Detachment, Disinhibition, and Psychoticism) (rs range [0.08, 0.36]). In the regression analysis, the predictors of OrNe were Neuroticism and, to a lesser extent, Psychoticism. For HeOr, the associations were lower (rs range [−0.13, 0.05]) and negative, except Psychoticism. Only the relationship with Disinhibition was statistically significant, although after controlling for OrNe, Negative Affectivity and Antagonism also became significant. In the regression analysis, the predictors of HeOr were Disinhibition (negative direction) and Psychoticism (positive direction). The findings show that OrNe is associated with a pathological personality pattern characterized by difficulty in regulating emotions and negative affect (Negative Affectivity), as well as eccentricity, feeling special, and holding beliefs outside the norm (Psychoticism). However, HeOr seems to be related to the tendency toward high responsibility, self-control, the ability to maintain the focus of attention (low Disinhibition), and Psychoticism. Future studies should confirm whether this combination is a key component underlying the development and maintenance of orthorexia.
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- 2021
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9. Motives to Have Sex: Measurement and Correlates With Sociodemographic, Sexual Life, and Psychosexual Characteristics
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Juan Ramón Barrada, Ángel Castro, Elena Fernández-del-Río, and Pedro J. Ramos-Villagrasa
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sexual motives ,university students ,validation ,Sexual Motivations Scale ,sexual behavior ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Knowledge of diverse sexual motivations can have profound implications for our comprehension of the causes, correlations, and consequences of sexual behavior. This study had two objectives: on the one hand, to determine the different motives why young Spanish university students have sex and their relationship with different sociodemographic and psychosexual variables and sexual behavior; on the other hand, to review and improve the psychometric properties of the Sexual Motivations Scale and validate it in Spanish. Participants were 805 university students of both sexes (78% women, 74% heterosexuals), aged between 18 and 26 years (Mage = 20.88), who completed a battery of online questionnaires. Significant associations were found between young people's sexual motives, especially the motives of coping, peer pressure, and enhancement, the sociodemographic variables (sex, age sexual orientation, relational status), sexual behavior (age of initiation), and psychosexual variables (sociosexuality, self-esteem as a sexual partner, satisfaction with sex life). Also, a new structure of the Sexual Motivations Scale was proposed, with the elimination of the factor of Self-Affirmation. The discussion highlights the relevance of the results obtained due to their implications in the promotion of sexual health, in addition to achieving the first instrument validated in Spanish for the evaluation of sexual motivations.
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- 2021
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10. Do young dating app users and non-users differ in mating orientations?
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Juan Ramón Barrada, Ángel Castro, Elena Fernández Del Río, and Pedro J Ramos-Villagrasa
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
In recent years, dating apps have changed the way people meet and communicate with potential romantic and/or sexual partners. There exists a stereotype considering that these apps are used only for casual sex, so those apps would not be an adequate resource to find a long-term relationship. The objective of this study was to analyze possible individual differences in the mating orientations (short-term vs. long-term) between users and non-users of dating apps. Participants were 902 single students from a mid-size Spanish university, of both sexes (63% female, and 37% male), aged between 18 and 26 years (M = 20.34, SD = 2.05), who completed a battery of online questionnaires. It was found that, whereas dating apps users had a higher short-term mating orientation than non-users (more frequent behavior, higher desire, and more positive attitude), there were no differences in the long-term orientation as a function of use/non-use. Considering this, dating apps are a resource with a strong presence of people interested on hooking-up while, simultaneously, not a bad (nor good) option for finding long-term love.
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- 2021
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11. Childhood Sexual Abuse, Sexual Behavior, and Revictimization in Adolescence and Youth: A Mini Review
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Ángel Castro, Javier Ibáñez, Berta Maté, Jessica Esteban, and Juan Ramón Barrada
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childhood sexual abuse ,sexual risk behaviors ,revictimization ,adolescents and young adults ,traumagenic dynamics model ,information-motivation-behavioral skills model ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Childhood sexual abuse (CSA) is considered as an activity aimed at providing sexual pleasure, stimulation, or sexual gratification to an adult who uses a minor for this purpose, taking advantage of the situation of superiority. CSA can have devastating consequences for the child. Previous studies have concluded that those who suffer an episode of CSA perform more risky sexual behaviors and are more likely to experience further episodes of sexual victimization during adolescence and early youth. There are two theoretical contributions that, although they offer partial views, can help to understand the association between CSA, sexual behavior, and revictimization in adulthood: the traumagenic dynamics model and the information-motivation-behavioral skills model. This short review provides an overview of the problems and theoretical explanations that have been presented up to the present, underlining the importance of prevention and sex education as of childhood, as well as the need to continue investigating in order to develop specific theoretical models that help to understand and prevent CSA and its consequences.
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- 2019
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12. Not all Online Sexual Activities Are the Same
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Juan Ramón Barrada, Paula Ruiz-Gómez, Ana Belén Correa, and Ángel Castro
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online sexual activities ,cybersex ,pornograhpy ,offline sexual behavior ,psychosexual well-being ,university students ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Young people's use and participation in online sexual activities (OSA) has increased in the past two decades and has changed their behavior in the area of sexuality. The existing literature has some important limitations, concerning the assessment of the construct and its orientation toward problematic use, while ignoring its healthy use or social participation and its relationship with well-being. The main objective of this study was to analyze the relationships between the three types of OSA (compulsive, isolated, and social) proposed by Delmonico and Miller, as well as offline sexual behavior, and psychosexual well-being. It was also necessary to evaluate the factor structure of the Internet Sexual Screening Test (ISST). Participants were 1,147 university students of both sexes, aged between 18 and 26 years, who completed a battery of online questionnaires. The main finding of the study is that, when controlling for other online sexual behavior, different types of OSA evaluated relate differently to offline sexual behavior and to psychosexual well-being, and that most young people made healthy use and participation of OSA. It also presents a new structure of the ISST. The discussion emphasizes the need to recognize the positive consequences of OSA to implement programs for the promotion of sexual health.
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- 2019
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13. Psychometric properties of the Teruel Orthorexia Scale (TOS) among a French–Canadian adult sample
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Christophe Maïano, Annie Aimé, Carlos A. Almenara, Cynthia Gagnon, and Juan Ramón Barrada
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology - Published
- 2022
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14. Operationalization and measurement of compulsivity across video gaming and gambling behavioral domains
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Ismael Muela, Juan F. Navas, Juan Ramón Barrada, José López-Guerrero, Francisco J. Rivero, Damien Brevers, and José C. Perales
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Background Compulsivity is the hallmark of addiction chronification and, as a construct, has played an important role in unveiling the etiological pathways from learning mechanisms underlying addictive behavior to harms resulting from it. However, a sound use of the compulsivity construct in the field of behavioral addictions has been hindered to date by the lack of consensus regarding its definition and measurement. Here we capitalize on a previous systematic review and expert appraisal to develop a compulsivity scale for candidate behavioral addictions (the Granada Assessment for Cross-domain Compulsivity, GRACC).Methods The initial scale (GRACC90) consisted of 90 items comprising previously proposed operationalizations of compulsivity, and was validated in two panel samples of individuals regularly engaging in gambling and video gaming, using exploratory structural equation modeling (ESEM) and convergence analyses.Results The GRACC90 scale is unidimensional and structurally invariant across samples, and predicted severity of symptoms, lower quality of life, and negative affect, to similar degrees in the two samples. Additionally, poorer quality of life and negative affect were comparably predicted by compulsivity and by severity of symptoms. A shorter version of the scale (GRACC18) is proposed, based on selecting the 18 items with highest factor loadings.Conclusions Results support the proposal that core symptoms of behavioral addictions strongly overlap with compulsivity, and peripheral symptoms are not essential for their conceptualization. Further research should clarify the etiology of compulsive behavior, and whether pathways to compulsivity in behavioral addictions could be common or different across domains.
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- 2023
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15. A silent burden: how negative experiences with public toilets impact quality of life and life satisfaction
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Guido Corradi, Juan Ramón Barrada, and Eduardo Garcia-Garzon
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Public toilets are a critical public health issue with a significant negative impact on people's lives. Unfortunately, the effect of negative experiences caused by public toilets on people's quality of life and life satisfaction is unknown. In this study, participants (n = 550) were asked to fill in a scale-based survey about their negative experiences with public toilets, quality of life, and life satisfaction. We found that people with toilet-dependent illnesses (36% of the sample) reported more negative experiences with public toilets than their counterparts. These negative experiences are also related to lower scores in some areas of participants' quality of life, such as their environmental, psychological, and physical health and life satisfaction, even after controlling for relevant socioeconomic variables.Additionally, toilet-dependent individuals had particularly negative experiences in terms of life satisfaction and physical health than non-toilet-dependent people. We conclude that the impoverishment of quality of life linked to public toilets as an environmental inadequacy is traceable, estimable, and meaningful. This association is not only negative for ordinary people, but it is significantly negative for people with toilet-dependent illnesses. These results highlight that public toilets are essential to ensure collective well-being, particularly when considering those affected by their presence or lack thereof.
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- 2023
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16. Attitudes Towards the Sexuality of Adults with Intellectual Disabilities: A Systematic Review
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Juan Ramón Barrada, Ángel Castro, and Ana Belén Correa
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Qualitative evidence ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Rehabilitation ,Scopus ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Human sexuality ,medicine.disease ,Preference ,Developmental psychology ,Friendship ,Sex life ,Intellectual disability ,medicine ,Psychology ,media_common ,Social status - Abstract
Current research in attitudes towards the sexuality of adults with intellectual disabilities yields heterogeneous results. The aim of the present paper was to systematically review current qualitative and quantitative evidence of attitudes towards the sexuality of adults with intellectual disabilities. A systematic review of current literature (2000–2020) was carried out in the ERIC, PsychINFO, SCOPUS, PUBMED, and WebOfScience databases. Thirty-three articles were included for review. The present review protocol is registered in the PROSPERO database. Included studies presented attitudes towards the sexuality of adults with intellectual disabilities in samples comprised of staff, family, members of the community, and adults with intellectual disability. Community samples held more positive attitudes, followed by staff and family. Adults with intellectual disabilities reported interest in intimate relationships but perceived barriers in others’ attitudes. Factors such as familiarity, age, gender of the adult with a disability, and culture seemed to have clear relationships. Other factors such as gender or social status remain unclear. In general, attitudes were considered positive. However, a preference for low intimacy and friendship or Platonic relationships was found. Stereotypes towards intellectual disability may have a strong influence. These findings underline the need to investigate and address attitudinal changes to provide adequate support for adults with intellectual disabilities in regard to a healthy relational and sex life.Prospero registration number: CRD42021222918.
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- 2021
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17. Negative experiences with public bathroom and Chronic Illness-Related Shame
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Guido Corradi, Eduardo Garcia-Garzon, Juan Ramón Barrada, and Leticia León
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Introduction: The use of public bathrooms is a challenge for everyone, butespecially for those who are affected by a bathroom‐dependent condition.Being dependent on bathrooms is linked with different negative emotions.One of them is a clinically relevant emotion: shame associated with thechronic condition.Materials and Methods: In a cross‐sectional survey study (n = 193) of peoplewho suffer a bathroom‐dependent condition we asked about health conditions,well‐being, and shame related to chronic condition outcomes.Results: We show a link between negative public bathroom experiences, anddiminished well‐being and feelings of shame related to chronic illness. Wefound that this relationship between negative experiences with publicbathrooms and shame is not specific to the different conditions.Conclusion: We conclude that the negative experiences which people withdifferent gastrointestinal illnesses face is an environmental stressor associatedwith more embarrassment as a result of the condition suffered.
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- 2022
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18. Exploring COVID-19 research credibility among Spanish scientists
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Eduardo Garcia-Garzon, Ariadna Angulo-Brunet, Oscar Lecuona, Juan Ramón Barrada, and Guido Corradi
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General Psychology - Abstract
Amidst a worldwide vaccination campaign, trust in science plays a significant role when addressing the COVID-19 pandemic. Given current concerns regarding research standards, we were interested in how Spanish scholars perceived COVID-19 research and the extent to which questionable research practices and potentially problematic academic incentives are commonplace. We asked researchers to evaluate the expected quality of their COVID-19 projects and other peers' research and compared these assessments with those from scholars not involved in COVID-19 research. We investigated self-admitting and estimated rates of questionable research practices and attitudes towards current research status. Responses from 131 researchers suggested that COVID-19 evaluations followed partisan lines, with scholars being more pessimistic about others' colleagues' research than their own. Additionally,researchers not involved in COVID-19 projects were more negative than their participating peers. These differences were particularly notable for areas such as the expected theoretical foundations or overall quality of the research, among others. Most Spanish scholars expected questionable research practices and inadequate incentives to be widespread. In these two aspects, researchers tended to agree regardless of their involvement in COVID-19 research. We provide specific recommendations for improving future meta-science studies, such as redefining QRPs as inadequate research practices (IRP). This change could help avoid key controversies regarding QRPs' definition while highlighting their detrimental impact. Lastly, we join previous calls to improve transparency and academic career incentives as a cornerstone for generating trust in science.The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12144-022-02797-6.
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- 2022
19. The relation of orthorexia with lifestyle habits: Arabic versions of the Eating Habits Questionnaire and the Dusseldorf Orthorexia Scale
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Sahar Obeid, Souheil Hallit, Pascale Salameh, María Roncero, Juan Ramón Barrada, and Hala Sacre
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Psychiatry ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Physical activity ,Smoking ,RC435-571 ,Alcohol use disorder ,medicine.disease ,Structural equation modeling ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Eating disorders ,Convergent validity ,Scale (social sciences) ,Orthorexia nervosa ,medicine ,Healthy behaviors ,Psychology ,Lifestyle habits ,Construct (philosophy) ,Alcohol ,Clinical psychology ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Some of the commonly used tools to assess orthorexia nervosa (OrNe) do not allow a meaningful interpretation of the scores or yield mixed results about the dimensions needed to represent orthorexia. Since no advancement in the theoretical knowledge can be made without a thorough examination of the measurement aspects, this study aimed to evaluate the correlation between orthorexia nervosa (OrNe) and lifestyle habits, notably alcohol drinking, cigarette and waterpipe smoking, and physical exercise, and to validate and assess the psychometric properties of the Arabic versions of the Eating Habits Questionnaire (EHQ) and Düsseldorf Orthorexia Scale (DOS). Methods A total of 456 adult participants completed a self-administered questionnaire. Exploratory structural equation models were used to test the internal structure of the instruments. Shorter and more explicit versions were proposed for instruments. Pearson and partial correlations were computed between orthorexia scores and healthy behaviors scores. Results Regarding the internal structure of both EHQ and DOS, evidence favored the bi-dimensional construct of orthorexia. Both tools presented two theoretically clearly interpretable factors (OrNe and Healthy Orthorexia—HeOr—). The two questionnaires presented a high convergent validity, as dimensions with the same interpretation were correlated around 0.80. While OrNe was positively correlated with the use of unhealthy substances (higher alcohol use disorder, cigarette, and waterpipe dependence), HeOr was negatively associated with these behaviors. Conclusion Our results emphasize the idea that further attention should be paid to the multidimensional structure of orthorexia, as OrNe and HeOr present an opposite pattern of associations with healthy behaviors. An OrNe etiopathogenesis common to eating disorders can explain these differences., Plain English summary The term “orthorexia nervosa” (OrNe) denotes a possible pathological fixation on a health-conscious diet. Some of the commonly used tools to assess orthorexia nervosa (OrNe) do not allow a meaningful interpretation of the scores or yield mixed results about the dimensions needed to represent orthorexia. In this study, some items were simultaneously tapping both dimensions of orthorexic tendencies, and shorter versions of the DOS and EHQ scales were proposed to offer instruments with a more explicit structure. The final versions still presented high reliabilities. While HeOr was negatively associated with the consumption of unhealthy substances (higher alcohol use disorder, cigarette, and waterpipe dependence), OrNe was positively correlated with these behaviors. After controlling for OrNe or HeOr (partial correlations), the associations were even higher; the pattern of associations was more explicit, showing the importance of considering the multidimensional structure of orthorexia.
- Published
- 2021
20. Influence of vulnerability factors in panic disorder severity
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López, Jorge Osma, González, Juan Ramón Barrada, García-Palacios, Azucena, and Arbona, Cristina Botella
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- 2016
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21. Validation of the Spanish version of the Fear of Self Questionnaire
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María Roncero, Gemma García-Soriano, Kieron O Connor, Frederick Aardema, Juan Ramón Barrada, and Sara LLorens Aguilar
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050103 clinical psychology ,Self ,05 social sciences ,Spanish version ,Cognition ,Confirmatory factor analysis ,030227 psychiatry ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,medicine.symptom ,Set (psychology) ,Psychology ,Confusion ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Cognitive models, from both the appraisal and inferential confusion perspectives, propose that the self is a relevant variable in the development and maintenance of obsessive-compulsive (OC) disorder. In this study, we examined the psychometric properties of the Spanish version of the Fear of Self Questionnaire (FSQ) and analyzed the role of the fear of self (the sort of person we are afraid of becoming) as a predictor of OC beliefs and symptoms. A sample of 359 non-clinical participants completed a set of questionnaires, including the FSQ. Confirmatory factor analysis replicated the original one-factor solution for both the FSQ-8- and 20-item versions. The FSQ demonstrated excellent reliability, and fear of self predicted OC symptoms and cognitions, especially unacceptable obsessions.
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- 2019
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22. Orthorexia nervosa vs. healthy orthorexia: relationships with disordered eating, eating behavior, and healthy lifestyle choices
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Hana F. Zickgraf and Juan Ramón Barrada
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Health Behavior ,Food choice ,Orthorexia Nervosa ,Structural equation modeling ,Feeding and Eating Disorders ,Food Preferences ,BMI ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Disordered eating ,Big Five personality traits ,Orthorexia nervosa ,Nutrition ,Eating disorder ,Feeding Behavior ,respiratory system ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Distress ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Original Article ,sense organs ,Diet, Healthy ,Psychology ,Body mass index ,Psychopathology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Background Orthorexia nervosa (OrNe) is a pattern of disordered eating behavior characterized by excessive preoccupation with overvalued ideas about healthy eating. Healthy orthorexia (HeOr) refers to a non-pathological interest in healthy eating and nutrition. Despite converging evidence that OrNe is correlated with measures of psychopathology and personality traits, there is relatively little empirical data relating OrNe and HeOr to eating and health-promoting behavior. Methods Aim 1: exploratory structural equation modeling was used to evaluate the factor structure of an English-language version of the Teruel Orthorexia Scale, the only measure of OrNe that also assesses HeOr in two samples (Yoga practitioners, N = 469, and Mechanical Turk workers, N = 453). Aim 2: conducted in the Mechanical Turk sample, partial correlation and linear regression analyses were used to evaluate the relationships of OrNe and HeOr with other symptoms of, and clinical impairment from, disordered eating, food choices, diet quality, body mass index (BMI), nutrition knowledge, alcohol/tobacco/vaping use, and sedentary behavior. Results The two-factor structure of the TOS was replicated. HeOr and OrNe had opposing relationships with measures of disordered eating behavior and distress, food choices, diet quality, and nutrition knowledge. HeOr was negatively related to BMI, whereas OrNe was positively related to substance use and sedentary behavior. Conclusions OrNe and HeOr are distinct latent constructs, with the latter reflecting non-pathological behavior. Only OrNe is related to elevated disordered eating and clinical impairment. Despite involving obsessions and compulsions related to healthy eating, OrNe was associated with relatively unhealthy eating and other lifestyle behaviors. Level of evidence Level V, descriptive cross-sectional study.
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- 2021
23. A school-based program implemented by community providers previously trained for the prevention of eating and weight-related problems in secondary-school adolescents : the MABIC study protocol
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Montserrat Pàmias, Esther Trepat, Juan Ramón Barrada, Jordi Fauquet, Mireia Querol, Joaquim Puntí, Gemma López-Guimerà, and David Sánchez-Carracedo
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Male ,Research design ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Effectiveness ,Disordered eating ,Feeding and Eating Disorders ,Study Protocol ,Intervention (counseling) ,Cognitive dissonance ,Humans ,Medicine ,Community Health Services ,Obesity ,Students ,Psychiatry ,School Health Services ,Schools ,business.industry ,Public health ,Prevention ,Body Weight ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Overweight ,medicine.disease ,Eating disorders ,Adolescent Behavior ,Adolescent Health Services ,Research Design ,Spain ,Female ,Eating and weight-related problems ,Biostatistics ,business ,Social cognitive theory ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Background The prevention of eating disorders and disordered eating are increasingly recognized as public health priorities. Challenges in this field included moving from efficacy to effectiveness and developing an integrated approach to the prevention of a broad spectrum of eating and weight-related problems. A previous efficacy trial indicated that a universal disordered eating prevention program, based on the social cognitive model, media literacy educational approach and cognitive dissonance theory, reduced risk factors for disordered eating, but it is unclear whether this program has effects under more real-world conditions. The main aim of this effectiveness trial protocol is to test whether this program has effects when incorporating an integrated approach to prevention and when previously-trained community providers implement the intervention. Methods/design The research design involved a multi-center non-randomized controlled trial with baseline, post and 1-year follow-up measures. Six schools from the city of Sabadell (close to Barcelona) participated in the intervention group, and eleven schools from four towns neighboring Sabadell participated in the control group. A total of 174 girls and 180 boys in the intervention group, and 484 girls and 490 boys in the control group were registered in class lists prior to baseline. A total of 18 community providers, secondary-school class tutors, nurses from the Catalan Government’s Health and School Program, and health promotion technicians from Sabadell City Council were trained and delivered the program. Shared risk factors of eating and weight-related problems were assessed as main measures. Discussion It will be vital for progress in disordered eating prevention to conduct effectiveness trials, which test whether interventions are effective when delivered by community providers under ecologically valid conditions, as opposed to tightly controlled research trials. The MABIC project will provide new contributions in this transition from efficacy to effectiveness and new data about progress in the integrated approach to prevention. Pending the results, the effectiveness trial meets the effectiveness standards set down by the Society for Prevention Research. This study will provide new evidence to improve and enhance disordered eating prevention programs. Trial registration Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN47682626
- Published
- 2021
24. Tinder Users: Sociodemographic, Psychological, and Psychosexual Characteristics
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Juan Ramón Barrada and Ángel Castro
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Sexual partner ,Adult ,Male ,050103 clinical psychology ,dating apps ,Adolescent ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Tinder ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Sexual Behavior ,lcsh:Medicine ,050109 social psychology ,Computer-assisted web interviewing ,Personal Satisfaction ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,university students ,Heterosexuality ,media_common ,Motivation ,Tinder motives scale ,05 social sciences ,lcsh:R ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Sexual Partners ,Psychosexual development ,Sex life ,Sexual orientation ,psychosexual variables ,Curiosity ,Female ,Psychology ,Psychosocial - Abstract
Tinder is the most popular and most used dating app in the world today. Due to the recent popularization of the phenomenon of dating apps, there are still some gaps in the literature. Therefore, this study had a threefold objective: (1) to determine the prevalence and characteristics of Tinder users and Tinder use among young university students, (2) to know why these young people use Tinder, and (3) to analyze the relationship between Tinder use and different psychosocial correlates (positive and negative affect, body satisfaction, sociosexuality, and attitudes towards consensual nonmonogamy) and psychosexual well-being (self-esteem as a sexual partner, satisfaction with sex life, and preoccupation with sex). Participants were 1261 Spanish university students (77.4% women, 77.5% heterosexuals) between ages 18 and 26 (M = 20.59, SD = 2.04) who completed a battery of online questionnaires. A prevalence of Tinder use of about 15% was found. The motives for use most frequently reported by the participants were those of curiosity, passing time/entertainment, and sexual orientation. Besides, Tinder users showed greater sociosexuality than nonusers, as well as increased dissatisfaction with their sex life and sexual preoccupation, and more positive attitudes towards consensual nonmonogamy. Importantly, no or very small differences were found in the general emotional well-being-related variables. Tinder seems like just another tool used by young people for their romantic and/or sexual interactions, without any negative connotation.
- Published
- 2020
25. The Development of a Public Bathroom Perception Scale
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Juan Ramón Barrada, Guido Corradi, and Eduardo Garcia-Garzon
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psychometrics ,bathrooms ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Applied psychology ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,lcsh:Medicine ,02 engineering and technology ,inflammatory bowel diseases ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,health psychology ,well-being ,Affection ,Perception ,Humans ,Toilet Facilities ,media_common ,Service (business) ,environment evaluation ,business.industry ,Perspective (graphical) ,lcsh:R ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,scale development ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Usability ,Health psychology ,Scale (social sciences) ,Well-being ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Female ,Psychology ,business - Abstract
Public bathrooms are sensible locations in which individuals confront an intimate environment outside the comfort of their own home. The assessment of public bathrooms is especially problematic for people whose illnesses make them more prone to needing this service. Unfortunately, there is a lack in the evaluation of the elements that are relevant to the user&rsquo, s perspective. For that reason, we propose a new scale to assess these elements of evaluation of public bathrooms. We developed a scale of 14 items and three domains: privacy, ease of use and cleanliness. We tested the factor validity of this three-factor solution (n = 654) on a sample of healthy individuals and 155 respondents with a bowel illness or other affection that reported to be bathroom-dependent. We found that bathroom-dependent people value more privacy and cleanliness more than their healthy counterparts. We additionally found a gender effect on the scale: female participants scored higher in every domain. This study provides the first scale to assess value concerning public bathrooms and to highlight the relevance of different bathrooms&rsquo, aspects to users.
- Published
- 2020
26. Reply to Myszkowski et al. (2020): Some matters of fact concerning aesthetic sensitivity
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Guido Corradi, Erick G. Chuquichambi, Juan Ramón Barrada, Marcos Nadal, Ana Clemente, Fundación 'la Caixa', and Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
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Philosophy ,05 social sciences ,Postprint ,050109 social psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Sensitivity (control systems) ,Psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,General Psychology ,Epistemology - Abstract
We respond to some of Myszkowski and colleagues’ (2020, Br. J. Psychology) critical comments on our recent work on aesthetic sensitivity (Corradi, Chuquichambi, Barrada, Clemente, & Nadal, 2020, Br. J. Psychology). We show that these comments stem mostly from factual inaccuracies., Research funding: ‘la Caixa’ Foundation. Grant Number: 100010434. Spanish Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad. Grant Number: PSI2016‐ 77327‐P.
- Published
- 2020
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27. Bad Behaviors at Work: Spanish Adaptation of the Workplace Deviance Scale
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Pedro J. Ramos-Villagrasa, Elena Fernández del Río, and Juan Ramón Barrada
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Organizational citizenship behavior ,05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,Conscientiousness ,050105 experimental psychology ,Structural equation modeling ,Workplace deviance ,Job performance ,Organizational justice ,Scale (social sciences) ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Set (psychology) ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,General Psychology - Abstract
Counterproductive work behaviors (CWBs) refers to a set of negative intentional behaviors that harm organizational outcomes. Despite their consequences, their measurement is a debatable issue. The present study is aimed to validate the Spanish version of one of the most commonly used scales of CWBs, the Workplace Deviance Scale, and to provide further evidence about the reliability and validity of the test scores. Four hundred and thirty-two employees from different organizations participated in the study. They completed a self-report questionnaire with the measures of interest (sociodemographic data, the Workplace Deviance Scale, and scales of organizational citizenship behavior, organizational justice, integrity, and conscientiousness). Descriptive, exploratory structural equation modeling and correlational analyses were performed. Results have shown that the internal structure does not fully reproduce the original one, but the two theoretically expected factors remain. Furthermore, the pattern of associations is barely influenced by the scoring scheme used (factor vs. observed scores), and the associations with other constructs are in line with previous research. On the whole, this study contributes to the analysis of the dimensionality of CWBs, at least in Western countries.
- Published
- 2018
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28. Inferential Item-Fit Evaluation in Cognitive Diagnosis Modeling
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Juan Ramón Barrada, Jimmy de la Torre, Julio Olea, Francisco J. Abad, and Miguel A. Sorrel
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Computer science ,05 social sciences ,050401 social sciences methods ,Articles ,Item fit ,01 natural sciences ,010104 statistics & probability ,0504 sociology ,Goodness of fit ,Statistics ,Cognitive diagnosis ,Psychology (miscellaneous) ,0101 mathematics ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Type I and type II errors - Abstract
Research related to the fit evaluation at the item level involving cognitive diagnosis models (CDMs) has been scarce. According to the parsimony principle, balancing goodness of fit against model complexity is necessary. General CDMs require a larger sample size to be estimated reliably, and can lead to worse attribute classification accuracy than the appropriate reduced models when the sample size is small and the item quality is poor, which is typically the case in many empirical applications. The main purpose of this study was to systematically examine the statistical properties of four inferential item-fit statistics: [Formula: see text], the likelihood ratio (LR) test, the Wald (W) test, and the Lagrange multiplier (LM) test. To evaluate the performance of the statistics, a comprehensive set of factors, namely, sample size, correlational structure, test length, item quality, and generating model, is systematically manipulated using Monte Carlo methods. Results show that the [Formula: see text] statistic has unacceptable power. Type I error and power comparisons favor LR and W tests over the LM test. However, all the statistics are highly affected by the item quality. With a few exceptions, their performance is only acceptable when the item quality is high. In some cases, this effect can be ameliorated by an increase in sample size and test length. This implies that using the above statistics to assess item fit in practical settings when the item quality is low remains a challenge.
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- 2017
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29. Sociodemographic and Psychosexual Characteristics of Students from a Spanish University Who Engage in Casual Sex
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Juan Ramón Barrada, Paula Ruiz-Gómez, Ángel Castro, and Ana Belén Correa
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Health (social science) ,Sociology and Political Science ,Casual ,05 social sciences ,Partner relationship ,050109 social psychology ,Organizational commitment ,Computer-assisted web interviewing ,Developmental psychology ,Gender Studies ,Sexual behavior ,050903 gender studies ,Psychosexual development ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0509 other social sciences ,Psychology ,Psychosocial - Abstract
Casual sexual relations, understood as those in which there are no expectations of affective commitment, are increasingly common among youth. The goal of this study was to analyze the casual sexual behavior of students from a Spanish university, paying special attention to its relation with sociodemographic and psychosexual variables. Participants were 659 students from a Spanish university aged between 18 and 26 years, without a partner or being in a partner relationship of less than 12 months, who completed a battery of online questionnaires. It was found that about half of the participants had engaged in casual sex in the past year, with no differences as a function of gender. Engaging in casual sex was related to being older, less religious, performing risky sexual behaviors, and other psychosocial variables such as attitudes towards condoms, sociosexuality, and measures of personal well-being. The discussion highlights the need to conduct more research on casual sexual relations, due to the possible influence of cultural aspects in youth’s sociosexuality.
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- 2017
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30. Profiling Dating Apps Users: Sociodemographic and Personality Characteristics
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Pedro J. Ramos-Villagrasa, Ángel Castro, Elena Fernández-del-Río, and Juan Ramón Barrada
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Adult ,Male ,dating apps ,050103 clinical psychology ,Adolescent ,Sexual Behavior ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Tinder ,media_common.quotation_subject ,lcsh:Medicine ,050109 social psychology ,Computer-assisted web interviewing ,Article ,Big Five ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,Young Adult ,Dark Core ,Humans ,Personality ,Interpersonal Relations ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,university students ,Big Five personality traits ,Multinomial logistic regression ,media_common ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,05 social sciences ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Mobile Applications ,Romance ,Grindr ,Sexual Partners ,Sexual orientation ,Female ,The Internet ,business ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
The development of new technologies, the expansion of the Internet, and the emergence of dating apps (e.g., Tinder, Grindr) in recent years have changed the way to meet and approach potential romantic and/or sexual partners. The recent phenomenon has led to some gaps in the literature on individual differences (sociodemographic variables and personality traits) between users (previous and current users) and non-users of dating apps. Thus, the aim of this study was to analyze the relationship between using dating apps, sociodemographics (gender, age, sexual orientation, and relationship status), and bright and dark personality traits. Participants were 1705 university students (70% women, 30% men), aged between 18 and 26 (M = 20.60, SD = 2.09), who completed several online questionnaires. Through multinomial logistic regression analyses, it was found that men, older youth, and members of sexual minorities were more likely to be current and previous dating apps users. Being single and higher scores in open-mindedness were associated with higher probability to be current dating apps user. The dark personality showed no predictive ability. The discussion highlights the usefulness of knowing and considering the sociodemographic background and the characteristics of personality patterns in the design and implementation of preventive and promotion programs of healthy romantic and sexual relationships to improve people&rsquo, s better health and well-being.
- Published
- 2020
31. Bad guys perform better? The incremental predictive validity of the Dark Tetrad over Big Five and Honesty-Humility
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Pedro J. Ramos-Villagrasa, Elena Fernández-del-Río, and Juan Ramón Barrada
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Predictive validity ,Contextual performance ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychopathy ,medicine.disease ,Job performance ,Narcissism ,medicine ,Personality ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Counterproductive work behavior ,General Psychology ,Machiavellianism ,media_common - Abstract
This study analyzed incremental effects of the Dark Tetrad traits (i.e., narcissism, Machiavellianism, psychopathy, sadism) on job performance dimensions (i.e., task performance, contextual performance, counterproductive work behavior) over the Big Five and Honesty-Humility. Using a multi-occupational sample of 613 employees, results revealed positive outcomes depending on the specific Dark Tetrad trait analyzed. After including sociodemographic and work-related variables, Big Five, and Honesty-Humility, narcissism and Machiavellianism were positively related to task performance, whereas psychopathy and sadism were negative predictors. Narcissism was also a positive predictor of contextual performance, while sadism was positively related to counterproductive work behavior. These results show that the Dark Tetrad is useful in its own right and incrementally above normal-range personality measures.
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- 2020
32. Intuitive eating: A novel eating style? Evidence from a Spanish sample
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Tatjana van Strien, Blanca Cativiela, Ausiàs Cebolla, Juan Ramón Barrada, and Health Sciences
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IES-2 ,validation ,050103 clinical psychology ,0303 health sciences ,Food intake ,Intuitive eating ,030309 nutrition & dietetics ,05 social sciences ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,DEBQ ,Weight control ,Test validity ,Emotional eating ,intuitive eating ,Developmental psychology ,eating styles ,Experimental Psychopathology and Treatment ,03 medical and health sciences ,Eating behavior ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Negative correlation ,Psychology ,Applied Psychology ,Body dissatisfaction - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 217000.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) Intuitive eating is defined as an adaptive way of eating that maintains a strong connection with the internal physiological signs of hunger and satiety. It has four elements: unconditional permission to eat whenever and whatever food is desired, eating for physical rather than for emotional reasons, reliance on hunger and satiety cues to determine when and how much to eat, and body-food choice congruence. In this study, we assessed the differences and similarities between intuitive eating, as measured with the Intuitive Eating Scale-2, and eating styles (restrained, emotional, and external eating), as assessed with the Dutch Eating Behavior Questionnaire. Using a Spanish sample of mainly university students (n = 1,095) we found that (a) unconditional permission to eat presented a large negative correlation with restrained eating, r = -.82; (b) eating for physical reasons had a large negative correlation with emotional eating, r = -.70; (c) the dimensions of intuitive eating only showed very small correlations with positive and negative affect, satisfaction with life, body dissatisfaction or weight control behavior after restrained, emotional, and external eating had been partialled out. Altogether, the present results suggest that two of the dimensions of intuitive eating as assessed with the IES-2 are not very new or innovative. The most promising new dimension of intuitive eating seems to be body-food choice congruence. 13 p.
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- 2020
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33. Adapting cognitive diagnosis computerized adaptive testing item selection rules to traditional item response theory
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Francisco J. Abad, Juan Ramón Barrada, Jimmy de la Torre, Miguel A. Sorrel, and UAM. Departamento de Psicología Social y Metodología
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Statistical methods ,Psychometrics ,Computer science ,Social Sciences ,Item ,Cognition ,Item response theory ,Statistics ,Diagnosis computerized ,Psychology ,Multidisciplinary ,Applied Mathematics ,Simulation and Modeling ,Traditional ,Data Accuracy ,Monte Carlo method ,Physical Sciences ,symbols ,Probability distribution ,Medicine ,Adaptive testing ,Algorithms ,Research Article ,Personality ,Personality Tests ,Science ,Bayesian Method ,Context (language use) ,Research and Analysis Methods ,symbols.namesake ,Bias ,Humans ,Computer Simulation ,Fisher information ,Personality Traits ,Computers ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Bayes Theorem ,Probability Theory ,Probability Distribution ,Psicología ,Mathematical and statistical techniques ,Selection rules ,Educational Measurement ,Computerized adaptive testing ,Mathematics - Abstract
Currently, there are two predominant approaches in adaptive testing. One, referred to as cognitive diagnosis computerized adaptive testing (CD-CAT), is based on cognitive diagnosis models, and the other, the traditional CAT, is based on item response theory. The present study evaluates the performance of two item selection rules (ISRs) originally developed in the CD-CAT framework, the double Kullback-Leibler information (DKL) and the generalized deterministic inputs, noisy “and” gate model discrimination index (GDI), in the context of traditional CAT. The accuracy and test security associated with these two ISRs are compared to those of the point Fisher information and weighted KL using a simulation study. The impact of the trait level estimation method is also investigated. The results show that the new ISRs, particularly DKL, could be used to improve the accuracy of CAT. Better accuracy for DKL is achieved at the expense of higher item overlap rate. Differences among the item selection rules become smaller as the test gets longer. The two CD-CAT ISRs select different types of items: items with the highest possible a parameter with DKL, and items with the lowest possible c parameter with GDI. Regarding the trait level estimator, expected a posteriori method is generally better in the first stages of the CAT, and converges with the maximum likelihood method when a medium to large number of items are involved. The use of DKL can be recommended in low-stakes settings where test security is less of a concern, This research was supported by Grant PSI2017-85022-P (Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades, Spain) and the UAMIIC Chair «Psychometric Models and Applications"
- Published
- 2020
34. Spanish version of the Inferential Confusion Questionnaire-Expanded Version: Further support for the role of inferential confusion in obsessive-compulsive symptoms
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Sara Llorens-Aguilar, Kieron O Connor, Frederick Aardema, Juan Ramón Barrada, María Roncero, and Gemma García-Soriano
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,050103 clinical psychology ,Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder ,Psychometrics ,Dysfunctional family ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Set (psychology) ,Confusion ,Reliability (statistics) ,05 social sciences ,Reproducibility of Results ,Spanish version ,Obsessive compulsive symptoms ,Health Surveys ,humanities ,030227 psychiatry ,Spanish population ,Clinical Psychology ,Spain ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Construct (philosophy) ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
The purposes of this research were (1) to analyse the psychometric properties of the Inferential Confusion Questionnaire-Expanded Version (ICQ-EV) in a Spanish population; (2) to explore the role of inferential confusion in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD); and (3) to compare the inferential confusion construct in nonclinical and clinical samples. A sample of 342 nonclinical participants and 66 patients with OCD completed the ICQ-EV Spanish adaptation as well as a set of questionnaires. Results confirmed a good fit of the ICQ-EV Spanish version to the original unifactorial structure and excellent internal consistency and test-retest reliability. Moreover, results confirmed that the ICQ-EV predicts Obsessing, Checking, Washing, and Hoarding symptoms, independently of the contribution of dysfunctional beliefs. In addition, OCD patients scored significantly higher on the ICQ-EV than nonclinical participants. The Spanish version of the ICQ-EV is a reliable instrument to assess inferential confusion, and further support is provided for the relevance of the inferential confusion construct in OCD.
- Published
- 2019
35. A new conception of visual aesthetic sensitivity
- Author
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Erick G. Chuquichambi, Marcos Nadal, Juan Ramón Barrada, Guido Corradi, Ana Clemente, La Caixa, and Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
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Balance ,Esthetics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Individuality ,050109 social psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Beauty ,Judgment ,Contour ,Excellence ,Personality ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,General Psychology ,symmetry ,media_common ,Valuation (finance) ,Curvature ,Visual aesthetics ,05 social sciences ,Complexity ,Aesthetic value ,Knowledge ,Aesthetic sensitivity ,Sensitivity test ,Artistic merit ,Cues ,Psychology ,Art ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Aesthetic sensitivity has been defined as the ability to recognize and appreciate beauty and compositional excellence, and to judge artistic merit according to standards of aesthetic value. The Visual Aesthetic Sensitivity Test (VAST) has often been used to assess this ability, but recent research has revealed it has several psychometric problems. Such problems are not easily remedied, because they reflect flawed assumptions inherent to the concept of aesthetic sensitivity as traditionally understood, and to the VAST itself. We introduce a new conception of aesthetic sensitivity defined as the extent to which someone's aesthetic valuation is influenced by a given feature. Experiment 1 aimed to characterize aesthetic sensitivity to four prominent features in visual aesthetics: complexity, symmetry, contour, and balance. Experiment 2 aimed to replicate the findings of Experiment 1 and to assess the test–retest reliability of an instrument designed to measure aesthetic sensitivity to these features using an abridged set of stimuli. Our results reveal that people differ remarkably in the extent to which visual features influence their liking, highlighting the crucial role of individual variation when modelling aesthetic preferences. We did not find clear relations between the four measures of aesthetic sensitivity and personality, intelligence, and art interest and knowledge. Finally, our measurement instrument exhibited an adequate-to-good test–retest reliability., The research leading to these results has received support from ‘la Caixa’ Foundation (ID 100010434) with fellowship code LCF/BQ/ES17/11600021, and from Grant PSI2016‐77327‐P, awarded by the Spanish Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad.
- Published
- 2019
36. Orthorexia Nervosa and Healthy Orthorexia as New Eating Styles
- Author
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Juan Ramón Barrada
- Abstract
It was recently proposed that healthy orthorexia (HeOr) and orthorexia nervosa (OrNe) should be differentiated. The aim of the present study was to analyze whether the two dimensions of orthorexia can be considered new eating styles or basically equivalent to restrained eating behavior. Two samples of university students (sample 1, n = 460; sample 2, n = 509) completed the Teruel Orthorexia Scale (TOS), the Dutch Eating Behavior Questionnaire (DEBQ), and the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS). Factor analysis with the TOS and DEBQ items together revealed an adequate fit for the preexisting five-factor solution (TOS: OrNe and HeOr; DEBQ: Restrained Eating, Emotional Eating, and External Eating). This result points out that these factors are conceptually distinguishable. Moreover, we tested whether the different eating styles presented different patterns of correlations with gender, body mass index (BMI), and age, and whether OrNe and HeOr predicted Positive and Negative Affect after controlling for Restrained, Emotional, and External Eating. Whereas Restrained and Emotional Eating were higher for women and increased with BMI in both samples, HeOr and OrNe presented much lower associations with these variables. OrNe was positively related to Negative Affect and negatively to Positive Affect, whereas HeOr was positively related to Positive Affect. Again, this result supports the assumption that OrNe is a new variant of disordered eating, whereas HeOr could possibly be seen as a protective behavior.
- Published
- 2019
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37. Profiling Children Sexual Abuse in a Sample of University Students: A Study on Characteristic of Victims, Abusers, and Abuse Episodes
- Author
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Berta Maté, José David Moreno, Juan Ramón Barrada, Ángel Castro, and Javier Ibáñez-Vidal
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Universities ,victims ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Initial sample ,episode characteristics ,Article ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Effective interventions ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,030212 general & internal medicine ,university students ,Child ,Students ,business.industry ,Adult Survivors of Child Abuse ,Public health ,05 social sciences ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Child Abuse, Sexual ,children sexual abuse ,abusers ,Sexual abuse ,Child sexual abuse ,Medicine ,Female ,business ,Sexual contact ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Demography - Abstract
Because of its prevalence and its potential negative consequences, child sexual abuse (CSA) is a public health problem in every country in the world. Knowledge of the characteristics of abuse episodes (victim, abuser, relationship between them, type of sexual contact, duration, threat and/or use of force) is essential to specify the contents of intervention programs for the detection and reduction of the negative consequences of CSA. Starting with an initial sample of 1605 university students of both sexes (70.9% women, 29.1% men), aged between 18 and 26 years (M = 21.1, SD = 2.2), 90 participants who had suffered an episode of CSA up to age 16 were selected (84.4% women, 15.6% men, Mage = 21.1, SD = 2.2). It was found that: (1) there was a higher prevalence of CSA among women and that the victims’ average age when they suffered abuse was around 11 years, (2) the abusers were mostly male, close to the victims, and with an average of slightly less than 30 years, and (3) there was a significant proportion (25.6%) of CSA cases with penetration and in which force was used or threatened. These results are relevant, as they show that there is still a noteworthy prevalence of CSA cases on university campuses that needs to be addressed. Knowing the characteristics of these episodes is critical to implementing more effective interventions.
- Published
- 2021
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38. Internal Structure and Measurement Invariance of the Dutch Eating Behavior Questionnaire (DEBQ) in a (Nearly) Representative Dutch Community Sample
- Author
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Tatjana van Strien, Juan Ramón Barrada, and Ausiàs Cebolla
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Psychometrics ,Sample (statistics) ,medicine.disease ,Structural equation modeling ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Eating disorders ,Dutch Population ,medicine ,Eating behavior ,Measurement invariance ,Association (psychology) ,Psychology - Abstract
The Dutch Eating Behavior Questionnaire is a widely used instrument for assessment of emotional, external and restrained eating. The aim of the present study is to (i) analyse its internal structure using exploratory structural equation modelling; (ii) to assess its measurement invariance with respect to sex, BMI, age and level of education; and (iii) to evaluate the relations of the factors with these variables. Except that women were slightly over-represented, the sample (n = 2173) closely followed the sociodemographic characteristics of the overall Dutch population. The three theoretical factors that emerged from the analysis were in close correspondence with the three scales for emotional, external and restrained eating. Only two items (item 3 - 'desire to eat when nothing to do…' and item 21 - 'resist delicious food...') presented problematic loadings. The questionnaire showed satisfactory measurement invariance, and expected patterns of mean differences and relations were found. All in all, the results highlight the adequate psychometric properties of the Dutch Eating Behavior Questionnaire. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and Eating Disorders Association.
- Published
- 2016
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39. Childhood sexual abuse, sexual behavior, and revictimization in adolescence and youth: a mini review
- Author
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Jessica Esteban, Javier Ibáñez, Juan Ramón Barrada, Berta Maté, and Ángel Castro
- Subjects
traumagenic dynamics model ,Mini Review ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,Poison control ,Suicide prevention ,050105 experimental psychology ,Occupational safety and health ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Injury prevention ,Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Association (psychology) ,revictimization ,General Psychology ,sexual risk behaviors ,Gratification ,05 social sciences ,Human factors and ergonomics ,lcsh:Psychology ,Sexual abuse ,childhood sexual abuse ,information-motivation-behavioral skills model ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,adolescents and young adults - Abstract
Childhood sexual abuse (CSA) is considered as an activity aimed at providing sexual pleasure, stimulation, or sexual gratification to an adult who uses a minor for this purpose, taking advantage of the situation of superiority. CSA can have devastating consequences for the child. Previous studies have concluded that those who suffer an episode of CSA perform more risky sexual behaviors and are more likely to experience further episodes of sexual victimization during adolescence and early youth. There are two theoretical contributions that, although they offer partial views, can help to understand the association between CSA, sexual behavior, and revictimization in adulthood: the traumagenic dynamics model and the information-motivation-behavioral skills model. This short review provides an overview of the problems and theoretical explanations that have been presented up to the present, underlining the importance of prevention and sex education as of childhood, as well as the need to continue investigating in order to develop specific theoretical models that help to understand and prevent CSA and its consequences.
- Published
- 2019
40. Assessing Job Performance Using Brief Self-report Scales: The Case of the Individual Work Performance Questionnaire
- Author
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Linda Koopmans, Juan Ramón Barrada, Elena Fernández-del-Río, and Pedro J. Ramos-Villagrasa
- Subjects
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,brief self-report scale ,Job performance ,Social Psychology ,Counterproductive work behaviors ,Job performance, Task performance, Contextual performance, Counterproductive work behaviors, Adaptation, Brief self-report scale ,05 social sciences ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,050109 social psychology ,adaptation ,Task performance ,counterproductive work behaviors ,Brief self-report scale ,job performance ,task performance ,lcsh:Psychology ,Contextual performance ,0502 economics and business ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Adaptation ,Psychology ,050203 business & management ,contextual performance ,Desempeño laboral, Desempeño de tarea, Desempeño contextual, Conductas contraproductivas en el trabajo, Adaptación, Escala autoinformada breve - Abstract
Job performance is considered the “ultimate dependent variable” in human resource management, turning its assessment into a capital issue. The present study analyzes the functioning of a brief 18-item self-report scale, the Individual Work Performance Questionnaire (IWPQ), which measures the main dimensions of job performance (task performance, contextual performance, and counterproductive behaviors) in a wide variety of jobs. Participants were 368 employees who voluntarily answered a questionnaire including the IWPQ, other performance scales, and the NEO-FFI. Descriptive statistics, exploratory structural equation modeling, and correlations were performed. Results show that the IWPQ has a tridimensional structure with adequate reliability, exhibits significant associations with other measures of performance, and its association with personality traits is similar in terms of direction and strength of the correlations between other job performance measures and personality. We conclude that the IWPQ is an adequate measure of job performance but with emphasis on behaviors aimed toward organizations. El desempeño laboral es considerado la “variable dependiente definitiva” en recursos humanos, convirtiendo su evaluación en algo crucial. El presente estudio analiza el funcionamiento de una escala autoinformada breve de 18 ítems, el Individual Work Performance Questionnaire (IWPQ), que mide las principales dimensiones del desempeño laboral (desempeño de tarea, desempeño contextual y comportamientos contraproductivos en el trabajo) en una amplia variedad de trabajos. Los participantes fueron 368 empleados que voluntariamente completaron un cuestionario que incluía el IWPQ, otras escalas de desempeño y el NEO-FFI. Se llevaron a cabo estadísticos descriptivos, modelos exploratorios de ecuaciones estructurales y correlaciones. Los resultados muestran que el IWPQ tiene una estructura tridimensional con una fiabilidad adecuada, mostrando asociaciones significativas con el resto de medidas de desempeño. En cuanto a los factores de personalidad, el IWPQ muestra correlaciones similares a las de los otros instrumentos de desempeño analizados. Se concluye que el IWPQ es un instrumento adecuado para medir de manera breve y autoinformada el desempeño laboral, pero con énfasis en los comportamientos dirigidos hacia la organización.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Sociosexuality and bright and dark personality: the prediction of behavior, attitude, and desire to engage in casual sex
- Author
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Ángel Castro, Pedro J. Ramos-Villagrasa, Elena Fernández del Río, and Juan Ramón Barrada
- Subjects
Agreeableness ,Adult ,Male ,050103 clinical psychology ,casual sex ,Adolescent ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Sexual Behavior ,Psychopathy ,sociosexual behavior ,sociosexual attitudes ,Poison control ,lcsh:Medicine ,050109 social psychology ,Models, Psychological ,Article ,Young Adult ,Dark Tetrad ,medicine ,Personality ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Social Behavior ,media_common ,Dark triad ,Extraversion and introversion ,05 social sciences ,lcsh:R ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Conscientiousness ,medicine.disease ,sadism ,Neuroticism ,Dark Triad ,Attitude ,Socioeconomic Factors ,personality ,Female ,Psychology ,sociosexuality ,Social psychology ,sociosexual desire - Abstract
Research about sociosexuality, understood as differences in people&rsquo, s willingness to have sex without commitment in terms of its predictors, such as demographics, relationship status, or individual traits, such as personality, is still scarce. Although sociosexuality was initially considered unidimensional, a tridimensional structure&mdash, with behavior, attitudes, and desire as its components&mdash, is gaining momentum in the literature nowadays. The present study proposes to develop different predictive models for each dimension, examining the role of personality (i.e., the &ldquo, Big Five&rdquo, and the &ldquo, Dark Tetrad&rdquo, ) and sociodemographic variables. Participants were 991 university students from a Spanish university (75.5% women, 72.0% heterosexual, Mage = 20.66). Our results provide evidence that predictors of sociosexuality vary depending on the dimension under analysis. Being female, older, not having a heterosexual orientation, and not being involved in a current relationship predicted higher scores in sociosexual behavior and attitudes. Regarding personality, psychopathy and extraversion were the only traits involved in all three components of sociosexuality. Neuroticism, agreeableness, and conscientiousness also play a role in the prediction of some of the sociosexuality dimensions. These results help to disentangle the relationship between personality and sociosexuality and to design more effective programs and policies to promote sexual health.
- Published
- 2019
42. Cheating on Unproctored Internet Test Applications: An Analysis of a Verification Test in a Real Personnel Selection Context
- Author
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Julio Olea, Alejandro Vidal, Francisco J. Abad, David Aguado, Juan Ramón Barrada, and Vicente Ponsoda
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Linguistics and Language ,Deception ,Cheating ,Personnel selection ,Context (language use) ,Language and Linguistics ,0504 sociology ,0502 economics and business ,Statistics ,Humans ,Personnel Selection ,General Psychology ,Statistic ,Internet ,fungi ,05 social sciences ,050401 social sciences methods ,Test (assessment) ,Test score ,Female ,Computerized adaptive testing ,Educational Measurement ,Psychology ,050203 business & management ,Software verification - Abstract
This study analyses the extent to which cheating occurs in a real selection setting. A two-stage, unproctored and proctored, test administration was considered. Test score inconsistencies were concluded by applying a verification test (Guo and Drasgow Z-test). An initial simulation study showed that the Z-test has adequate Type I error and power rates in the specific selection settings explored. A second study applied the Z-test statistic verification procedure to a sample of 954 employment candidates. Additional external evidence based on item time response to the verification items was gathered. The results revealed a good performance of the Z-test statistic and a relatively low, but non-negligible, number of suspected cheaters that showed higher distorted ability estimates. The study with real data provided additional information on the presence of suspected cheating in unproctored applications and the viability of using item response times as an additional evidence of cheating. In the verification test, suspected cheaters spent 5.78 seconds per item more than expected considering the item difficulty and their assumed ability in the unproctored stage. We found that the percentage of suspected cheaters in the empirical study could be estimated at 13.84%. In summary, the study provides evidence of the usefulness of the Z-test in the detection of cheating in a specific setting, in which a computerized adaptive test for assessing English grammar knowledge was used for personnel selection.
- Published
- 2018
43. Reconsidering the roots, structure, and implications of gambling motives: An integrative approach
- Author
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Gaëtan Devos, Cristian M. Ruiz de Lara, José C. Perales, Joël Billieux, Juan Ramón Barrada, and Juan F. Navas
- Subjects
Questionnaires ,Male ,REWARD ,SAMPLE ,Economics ,Gambling Addiction ,Emotions ,Social Sciences ,Traitement & psychologie clinique [H13] [Sciences sociales & comportementales, psychologie] ,Factor structure ,COGNITIONS ,PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Clinical Psychology ,Affect regulation ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Clinical Psychology ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Electron Microscopy ,PUNISHMENT ,Microscopy ,Multidisciplinary ,Variance (accounting) ,Middle Aged ,PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Quantitative Methods|Psychometrics ,Multidisciplinary Sciences ,EMOTION-REGULATION ,Research Design ,Scale (social sciences) ,Medicine ,Science & Technology - Other Topics ,Female ,Scanning Electron Microscopy ,SENSITIVITY ,IMPULSIVITY ,Games ,Social psychology ,Functional analysis (psychology) ,Research Article ,Adult ,Science ,QUESTIONNAIRE ,Addiction ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Quantitative Psychology ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Treatment & clinical psychology [H13] [Social & behavioral sciences, psychology] ,Structural equation modeling ,VALIDATION ,Mental Health and Psychiatry ,Humans ,Structure (mathematical logic) ,Behavior ,Motivation ,Science & Technology ,Survey Research ,PATHOLOGICAL GAMBLERS ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Behavioral activation ,Behavior, Addictive ,PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Gambling ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Recreation ,PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Clinical Psychology|Substance Abuse and Addiction ,PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Quantitative Methods ,Finance - Abstract
The present study identified Social, Financial, and Fun/thrill-related gambling motives factors, but also a fourth factor in which some positive and negative reinforcement-based motives were grouped into a single and broader Affect regulation factor. This Affect regulation factor shared variance both with BIS and BAS-related measures, and was the only direct predictor of disordered gambling symptoms. The Fun/thrill factor was directly related to frequency of participation in high-arousal, skill-based games, and all factors were related to participation in lower-arousal, chance games (with Social motives negatively predicting both participation in the latter and total severity). In the SEM model, measures of BIS/BAS sensitivity were connected to gambling behavior only through gambling motives. Based on measures of items’ specificity, a shortened Spanish scale (the brief Gambling Motives Inventory, bGMI) is proposed to assess gambling motives in accordance with the observed 4-factor structure., This work is supported by a grant from the Spanish Government (Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, Secretaría de Estado de Investigación, Desarrollo e Innovación; Convocatoria 2017 de Proyectos I+D de Excelencia, Spain; co-funded by the Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional, FEDER, European Union), with reference number PSI2017-85488-P.
- Published
- 2018
44. Not all Online Sexual Activities Are the Same
- Author
-
Ángel Castro, Ana Belén Correa, Juan Ramón Barrada, and Paula Ruiz-Gómez
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,Human sexuality ,Computer-assisted web interviewing ,online sexual activities ,050105 experimental psychology ,psychosexual well-being ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Promotion (rank) ,Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,university students ,General Psychology ,media_common ,Reproductive health ,Original Research ,cybersex ,business.industry ,pornograhpy ,05 social sciences ,Social engagement ,lcsh:Psychology ,Psychosexual development ,Psychological well-being ,Well-being ,offline sexual behavior ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Young people's use and participation in online sexual activities (OSA) has increased in the past two decades and has changed their behavior in the area of sexuality. The existing literature has some important limitations, concerning the assessment of the construct and its orientation toward problematic use, while ignoring its healthy use or social participation and its relationship with well-being. The main objective of this study was to analyze the relationships between the three types of OSA (compulsive, isolated, and social) proposed by Delmonico and Miller, as well as offline sexual behavior, and psychosexual well-being. It was also necessary to evaluate the factor structure of the Internet Sexual Screening Test (ISST). Participants were 1, 147 university students of both sexes, aged between 18 and 26 years, who completed a battery of online questionnaires. The main finding of the study is that, when controlling for other online sexual behavior, different types of OSA evaluated relate differently to offline sexual behavior and to psychosexual well-being, and that most young people made healthy use and participation of OSA. It also presents a new structure of the ISST. The discussion emphasizes the need to recognize the positive consequences of OSA to implement programs for the promotion of sexual health.
- Published
- 2018
45. Is Small Still Beautiful for the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire? Novel Findings Using Exploratory Structural Equation Modeling
- Author
-
Luis Rojo-Moreno, Agustín Martínez-Molina, Gloria Ferrís, Luis Eduardo Garrido, Juan Ramón Barrada, Jose Armando Aguasvivas, Hudson Golino, Eva Legaz, and Víctor B. Arias
- Subjects
050103 clinical psychology ,Adolescent ,Factor structure ,dimensionality ,Structural equation modeling ,factor structure ,0504 sociology ,SDQ ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Mathematics education ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,adolescents ,Child ,Applied Psychology ,Language ,05 social sciences ,050401 social sciences methods ,Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire ,ESEM ,Confirmatory factor analysis ,Clinical Psychology ,CFA ,Latent Class Analysis ,Psychology ,Factor Analysis, Statistical ,behavioral problems - Abstract
Article first published online: June 17, 2018 During the present decade a large body of research has employed confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) to evaluate the factor structure of the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) across multiple languages and cultures. However, because CFA can produce strongly biased estimations when the population cross-loadings differ meaningfully from zero, it may not be the most appropriate framework to model the SDQ responses. With this in mind, the current study sought to assess the factorial structure of the SDQ using the more flexible exploratory structural equation modeling approach. Using a large-scale Spanish sample composed of 67,253 youths aged between 10 and 18 years (M = 14.16, SD = 1.07), the results showed that CFA provided a severely biased and overly optimistic assessment of the underlying structure of the SDQ. In contrast, exploratory structural equation modeling revealed a generally weak factorial structure, including questionable indicators with large cross-loadings, multiple error correlations, and significant wording variance. A subsequent Monte Carlo study showed that sample sizes greater than 4,000 would be needed to adequately recover the SDQ loading structure. The findings from this study prevent recommending the SDQ as a screening tool and suggest caution when interpreting previous results in the literature based on CFA modeling. The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article
- Published
- 2018
46. ACADEMIC DISHONESTY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF ZARAGOZA: TYPES AND INFLUENCING FACTORS
- Author
-
Juan Ramón Barrada, Ginesa López-Crespo, and Clara García
- Subjects
Medical education ,Academic dishonesty ,Psychology - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Bidimensional Structure of the Orthorexia: Development and Initial Validation of a New Instrument
- Author
-
María Roncero and Juan Ramón Barrada
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Questionnaire ,questionnaire ,Item bank ,Eating disorder ,Test validity ,Computer-assisted web interviewing ,Perfectionism (psychology) ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,BF1-990 ,159.9(05) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Eating disorders ,Rating scale ,Orthorexia nervosa ,Validation ,medicine ,Psychology ,General Psychology ,Psychopathology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
La ortorexia nerviosa puede entenderse como una preocupa- ción extrema o excesiva con alimentarse de comida considerada sana. Se puede distinguir entre ortorexia nerviosa y ortorexia saludable (interés en comer sano). Hasta ahora, no hay ningún instrumento disponible para eva- luar cada aspecto de la ortorexia con suficientes garantías psicométricas. El objetivo de este estudio era doble. Primero, desarrollar y validar un nuevo cuestionario de ortorexia –la Teruel Orthorexia Scale– y, segundo, analizar la asociación con otros contructos psicológicos y trastornos teóricamente relacionados con la ortorexia nerviosa: síntomas de trastornos de la alimen- tación, síntomas de trastorno obsesivo-compulsivo, afecto negativo y per- feccionismo. Los participantes fueron 942, mayoritariamente estudiantes universitarios, quienes completaron una batería de cuestionarios online. De estos, 148 ofrecieron respuestas en un retest 18 meses más tarde. Tras co- menzar con un banco inicial de 31 ítems, se propuso un test bidimensional de ortorexia. La versión final, con 17 ítems, comprende dos aspectos de la ortorexia relacionados, aunque diferenciables (r = .43). Primero, Ortorexia Saludable, que evalúa el interés saludable con la dieta, que es independiente de psicopatología e, incluso, inversamente relacionado con esta. Segundo, Ortorexia Nerviosa, que evalúa el impacto negativo social y emocional de in- tentar conseguir un modo de alimentación rígido. Esta dimensión repre- senta una preocupación patológica con una dieta saludable. Este estudio presenta un nuevo instrumento que ofrece posibilidades prometedoras en el estudio de la ortorexia. Orthorexia nervosa could be conceptualized as extreme or ex- cessive preoccupation with eating food believed to be healthy. Orthorexia nervosa and healthy orthorexia (interest in healthy eating) can be distin- guised. Up to now, there is no available instrument evaluating every aspect of orthorexia with sufficient psychometric guarantees. The objective of the present study was two-fold. First, to develop and validate a new question- naire of orthorexia –the Teruel Orthorexia Scale– and, second, to analyze the association with other psychological constructs and disorders theoreti- cally related to orthorexia nervosa: eating disorder symptoms, obsessive- compulsive disorder symptoms, negative affect, and perfectionism. Participants were 942 mainly university students who completed a battery of online questionnaires. Of them, 148 provided responses in a retest 18 months later. Starting with an initial item bank of 31 items, we proposed a bidimensional test of orthorexia. This final version, with 17 items, encom- passed two related, although differentiable (r = .43), aspects of orthorexia. First, Healthy Orthorexia, which evaluates the healthy interest with diet, which is independent of psychopathology, and even inversely associated with it. Second, Orthorexia Nervosa, which assesses the negative social and emotional impact of trying to achieve a rigid way of eating. This dimension represents a pathological preoccupation with a healthy diet. This study presents a new instrument that offers promising possibilities in the study of orthorexia.
- Published
- 2018
48. Factores de riesgo asociados a la aparición de alteraciones emocionales durante el periodo perinatal y el puerperio: Un estudio preliminar en una muestra de mujeres embarazadas a través de e-Health
- Author
-
Elena Crespo Delgado, Cristian Castellano Badenas, Elena Fermoselle Esclapez, Juan Ramón Barrada, and Jorge Javier Osma López
- Subjects
Postpartum depression ,Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,embarazo ,depresión posparto ,prevención ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,prevention ,postpartum depression ,e-Health ,factores de riesgo ,risk factors ,Medicine ,periodo perinatal ,pregnancy ,business ,Perinatal period ,perinatal period - Abstract
Introducción: El DSM-IV-TR, establece la prevalencia de la aparición de alteraciones emocionales (AE) en la mujer durante el periodo perinatal y el puerperio entorno al 70 % en el caso de la Tristeza Posparto, pudiendo llegar a cronificarse esta sintomatología en Depresión Posparto (DPP), hasta en un 10 % de los casos. Diferentes autores apuntan a la necesidad de homogeneizar la medición de los factores de riesgo relacionados con la aparición de este tipo de alteraciones en la mujer gestante. Objetivo: Evaluar e identificar aquellas mujeres embarazadas que cumplen uno o más FR para desarrollar ae durante el periodo perinatal y el puerperio y/o aquellas mujeres que cumplen criterios diagnósticos DSM-IV-TR de Episodio Depresivo antes y después del parto, a través de la evaluación online mediante la herramienta MamáFeliz (MMF), basada en e-Health. Método: La muestra la componen 25 mujeres, que se encontraban entre las semanas 16 y 36 de gestación. La evaluación incluida en MMF rastrea, a través de la entrevista diagnóstica SCID-I y otras medidas psicológicas, la presencia de algunos de los FR asociados a la aparición de DPP . Resultados: Los resultados obtenidos en este estudio preliminar muestran que los FR con mayor incidencia son: Sintomatología previa de depresión mayor, ambivalencia respecto al embarazo, vivencia de emociones negativas y sentimientos de inadaptación durante el embarazo, ansiedad prenatal y síntomas depresivos durante el embarazo. En contraposición a otros estudios científicos previos, nuestra muestra no presenta los FR: problemas de pareja, falta de apoyo social ni baja autoestima. Introduction: The DSM-IV-TR, establishes the prevalence of emotional disturbances occurrence in women during perinatal and postnatal periods between 70 % in the case of Babyblues, these symptoms could become chronic in Postpartum Depression in almost 10 % of the cases. The studies of this phenomenon, implemented to the date, have failed in the definition and description of risk factors associated to this psychopathology in Spanish samples. Objetive: Assessing and identifying those pregnant women that meet one or more risk factors to develope emotional disturbances during perinatal and postnatal period and/ or those women who meet diagnostic DSM-IV-TE criteria of Depressive Mood Episode (before or after delivery) by on-line assessment methodology based in e-Health and called MamáFeliz (MMF). Method: The sample is composed by 25 pregnant women, who are between 16 and 36 weeks of gestation. The assessment protocol included in hm evaluates, by means of SCID-I diagnostic interview and other psychological measures, the occurence of some of the associated risk factors of being depressed during prenatal and postnatal period. Results: The results of this preliminary study show that the risk factors with higher occurence are: previous major depression symptoms, ambivalence related to pregnancy, negative affect and inadaptative feelings during pregnancy. In contrast to previous scientific studies, our sample does not have the risk factors related to marital disadjustment, social supporting carences and low self-steem.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Measuring Orthorexia Nervosa: Psychometric Limitations of the ORTO-15
- Author
-
María Roncero, Conxa Perpiñá, and Juan Ramón Barrada
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,Male ,050103 clinical psychology ,Linguistics and Language ,Psychometrics ,Health Behavior ,Healthy eating ,Language and Linguistics ,Developmental psychology ,Feeding and Eating Disorders ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Internal consistency ,Independent samples ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,General Psychology ,Orthorexia nervosa ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,05 social sciences ,Reproducibility of Results ,Spanish version ,medicine.disease ,Spain ,Female ,Psychology ,Psychopathology - Abstract
Orthorexia nervosa has recently been defined as excessive preoccupation with healthy eating, causing significant nutritional deficiencies and social and personal impairments. The ORTO-15 is the most widely used instrument to evaluate orthorexia nervosa, although previous studies obtained inconsistent results about its psychometric properties, and there are no data on the Spanish version. Thus, the main objective of the present study was to analyze the psychometric properties of the Spanish adaptation of the ORTO-15. In order to cross-validate the results, two independent samples were used (Sample 1: n = 807, 74.1% women; Sample 2: n = 242, 63.2% women). The results did not support the original recoding and reversal of the items; thus, the original scores were maintained. The analysis of the internal structure showed that the best interpretable solution was unidimensional, and due to low loadings, four items were removed. The internal consistency (α = .74) and temporal stability (r = .92; p < .001) of the final ORTO-11 version were adequate, higher than the 15-item version. The questionnaire showed significant associations with eating psychopathology (EAT-26 and SR-YBC-EDS; range r = .64 – .29; p < .05). However, this result should be interpreted with caution due to the redundancy observed between the ORTO-15 and the EAT-26. Our results suggest that the psychometric properties of the Spanish version of the ORTO-15 are not adequate. Moreover, the instrument detects people who are on diets, but it is not efficient in detecting the severity of orthorexic behaviors and attitudes. New instruments are needed to continue the study of orthorexia nervosa.
- Published
- 2017
50. The Tridimensional Structure of Sociosexuality: Spanish Validation of the Revised Sociosexual Orientation Inventory
- Author
-
Ana Belén Correa, Juan Ramón Barrada, Paula Ruiz-Gómez, and Ángel Castro
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Casual ,Personality Inventory ,Sexual Behavior ,Individuality ,050109 social psychology ,Computer-assisted web interviewing ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Sociosexual orientation ,Interpersonal relationship ,Young Adult ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Measurement invariance ,Interpersonal Relations ,Social Behavior ,05 social sciences ,Gender Identity ,Reproducibility of Results ,Clinical Psychology ,Spain ,Scale (social sciences) ,Female ,Construct (philosophy) ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Psychosocial - Abstract
Casual sex has become a common experience for many university students. Therefore, it is necessary to have instruments and studies that analyze youth's orientation toward sociosexuality. The SOI-R assesses sociosexual behavior, attitudes toward sociosexuality, and the desire for relationships without commitment with just nine items. The goal of this study was to validate the Spanish version of the SOI-R, to improve the scale, and to contribute evidence of the utility of the Sociosexual Desire subscale. Participants were 839 heterosexual university students of both sexes, aged between 18 and 26, who completed a battery of online questionnaires. The internal structure of the SOI-R revealed the three proposed theoretical dimensions, with medium to low relationships between factors. The instrument has measurement invariance with regards to sex and age. The Spanish version of the SOI-R had adequate levels of reliability. The modification of the first item of the scale is suggested, as well as the relevance of assessing sociosexual desire as an independent construct. The relation between sociosexuality and other sociodemographic and psychosocial variables was also analyzed. The discussion highlights the need for research to determine youth's sociosexual orientation and patterns of casual sex.
- Published
- 2017
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