29 results on '"Beiwen Chen"'
Search Results
2. A Survey of Face Recognition Methods based on Deep Learning
- Author
-
Beiwen Chen, Xiaofang Liao, Haolin Zhu, Zhuoxian Gong, and Yingcong Li
- Abstract
Since the 21st century, people have put forward higher requirements for information security technology in many fields such as society and economy. The requirement has promoted the development of biometric identification technology. Face recognition technology has become a research hotspot in biometric identification technology with its unique advantages. In recent years, with the development of deep learning, face recognition technology has made breakthroughs. Face recognition technology based on deep learning has been widely used in various fields such as finance, education, security, transportation, and new retail. In the process of face recognition technology becoming popular, some comprehensive literatures are urgently needed to summarize the methods of face recognition technology. Based on this, this paper first introduces the principle and existing problems of traditional face recognition methods, and then introduces in detail two typical face recognition methods based on deep learning—face recognition methods based on convolutional neural networks and face recognition methods based on deep belief networks. Finally, we provide an overview of common face datasets.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Where Do the Cultural Differences in Dynamics of Controlling Parenting Lie? Adolescents as Active Agents in the Perception of and Coping with Parental Behavior
- Author
-
Beiwen Chen, Bart Soenens, Maarten Vansteenkiste, Stijn Van Petegem, and Wim Beyers
- Subjects
Parenting ,Control ,Autonomy-Support ,Psychological Control ,Guilt-induction ,Psychological needs ,Coping ,Cross-cultural ,Self-Determination Theory ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
There is ongoing debate about the universal or culture-specific role of controlling parenting in children’s and adolescents’ development. This study addressed the possibility of cultural variability in how controlling parenting practices are perceived and dealt with. Specifically, we examined Belgian ('N' = 341) and Chinese ('N' = 316) adolescents’ perceptions of and reactions towards a vignette depicting parental guilt-induction, relative to generally controlling and autonomy supportive vignettes. Whereas Belgian adolescents perceived guilt-induction to be as controlling as generally controlling parental behavior, Chinese adolescents’ perception of guilt-induction as controlling was more moderate. Belgian and Chinese adolescents also showed some similarities and differences in their responses to the feelings of need frustration following from the controlling practices, with compulsive compliance for instance being more common in Chinese adolescents. Discussion focuses on cross-cultural similarities and differences in dynamics of controlling parenting.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The Moderating Role of Vertical Collectivism in South-Korean Adolescents’ Perceptions of and Responses to Autonomy-Supportive and Controlling Parenting
- Author
-
Bart Soenens, Seong-Yeon Park, Elien Mabbe, Maarten Vansteenkiste, Beiwen Chen, Stijn Van Petegem, and Katrijn Brenning
- Subjects
parenting ,culture ,autonomy ,collectivism ,adolescence ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Research increasingly demonstrates that associations between autonomy-relevant parenting and adolescent adjustment generalize across cultures. Yet, there is still an ongoing debate about the role of culture in these effects of autonomy-relevant parenting. The current study aimed to contribute to a more nuanced perspective on this debate by addressing cultural variability in micro-processes involved in autonomy-relevant parenting and, more specifically, in adolescents’ appraisals of and responses to parental behavior. In this vignette-based experimental study, involving 137 South-Korean adolescents (54% female, mean age = 16 years), we examined whether individual differences in vertical collectivism affect the association between descriptions of potentially autonomy-supportive and controlling parenting practices and (a) appraisals of these practices (in terms of perceived autonomy support and control and experiences of autonomy need satisfaction and frustration), and (b) anticipated responses to these practices (i.e., negotiation, submissive compliance, and oppositional defiance). Participants in the autonomy-supportive condition reported more perceived autonomy support and autonomy satisfaction and lower perceived control and autonomy need frustration than participants in the controlling condition. Collectivism moderated between-vignette effects on perceived control and autonomy need frustration such that the differences between the autonomy-supportive and controlling vignettes were less pronounced (yet still significant) among adolescents scoring higher on collectivism. Collectivism did not moderate effects of the vignettes on the responses to parenting, but yielded a main effect, with collectivism relating to more submissive compliance and less oppositional defiance. Overall, the results suggest that both universal and culture-specific processes are involved in autonomy-relevant socialization.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Review on related technologies of fruit grading detection
- Author
-
Gan Chen, Beiwen Chen, and Yanfen Gan
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Chinese Education Examined via the Lens of Self-Determination
- Author
-
Maarten Vansteenkiste, Beiwen Chen, Shi Yu, and Chantal Levesque-Bristol
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Educational psychology ,Environmental support ,Institutional level ,Human development (humanity) ,Pedagogy ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Chinese education ,Engineering ethics ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Self-determination theory ,Autonomy ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Research evidence ,media_common - Abstract
Chinese education is controversial: it is not only lauded for Chinese students’ high test achievements but also criticized for curbing students’ deep learning and development into well-rounded individuals. In the current paper, we propose that self-determination theory (SDT) serves as a useful framework for anatomizing Chinese educational ecology, especially understanding the fundamental developmental costs behind Chinese students’ high test scores. In the first part, we provide an up-to-date overview of SDT, which proposes that a growth-oriented motivation fueled by basic psychological needs underlies human development; hence, the role of education is to provide environmental support for these needs. After reviewing research evidence, we conclude that SDT serves as a valid theoretical framework for analyzing Chinese education. In the second part, we apply the lens of SDT to better understand the motivational dynamics that prevail in Chinese education. In doing so, we first primarily focus on the distal institutional level, thereby examining in detail how the high-stakes testing system headed by Gaokao fails to support—and may even thwart—basic psychological needs; we also address counterarguments favoring Gaokao, such as heightened involvement and alignment. We then scrutinize the pros and cons at the proximal level of the student environment—i.e., teachers and parents. Finally, we discuss existing reform attempts, which seemingly have very limited effectiveness. We propose that awareness of the problem and more holistic change are needed to realize more effective and sustainable change in Chinese education.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Where Do the Cultural Differences in Dynamics of Controlling Parenting Lie? Adolescents as Active Agents in the Perception of and Coping with Parental Behavior
- Author
-
Stijn Van Petegem, Maarten Vansteenkiste, Wim Beyers, Bart Soenens, and Beiwen Chen
- Subjects
Animals ,Chromatography, Thin Layer ,Digitoxigenin/metabolism ,Digitoxin/metabolism ,Hydroxylation ,In Vitro Techniques ,Male ,Microsomes, Liver/metabolism ,NADP/metabolism ,Rats ,Time Factors ,Coping (psychology) ,AUTONOMY ,GUILT ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Self-Determination Theory ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,UNITED-STATES ,050109 social psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Perception ,Cultural diversity ,Control ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Cross-cultural ,Parenting ,Autonomy-Support ,Psychological Control ,Guilt-induction ,Psychological needs ,Coping ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,PERSPECTIVE ,General Psychology ,Self-determination theory ,media_common ,ASSOCIATIONS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTROL ,INDUCTION ,05 social sciences ,lcsh:Psychology ,Feeling ,Vignette ,RETHINKING ,Psychology ,CHINESE ,Autonomy ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Research Article - Abstract
There is ongoing debate about the universal or culture-specific role of controlling parenting in children’s and adolescents’ development. This study addressed the possibility of cultural variability in how controlling parenting practices are perceived and dealt with. Specifically, we examined Belgian ('N' = 341) and Chinese ('N' = 316) adolescents’ perceptions of and reactions towards a vignette depicting parental guilt-induction, relative to generally controlling and autonomy supportive vignettes. Whereas Belgian adolescents perceived guilt-induction to be as controlling as generally controlling parental behavior, Chinese adolescents’ perception of guilt-induction as controlling was more moderate. Belgian and Chinese adolescents also showed some similarities and differences in their responses to the feelings of need frustration following from the controlling practices, with compulsive compliance for instance being more common in Chinese adolescents. Discussion focuses on cross-cultural similarities and differences in dynamics of controlling parenting.
- Published
- 2018
8. Social Pressure and Unfulfilled Dreams Among Chinese and Belgian Parents
- Author
-
Dorien Wuyts, Bart Soenens, Maarten Vansteenkiste, and Beiwen Chen
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Social Psychology ,Psychological control ,Anthropology ,Cross-cultural ,Social pressure ,Measurement invariance ,Contingent self-esteem ,Psychology ,Association (psychology) ,Social psychology ,humanities ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
Chinese parents have been found to use more psychological control toward their children than Western parents. The present study examined whether Chinese, relative to Belgian, parents’ experiences of social pressure to be an achievement-promoting parent and their own unfulfilled dreams could account for this country-level difference in psychologically controlling parenting. In turn, the association of social pressure and unfulfilled dreams with parental psychological control was expected to be accounted for (i.e., mediated) by child-invested contingent self-esteem. In a cross-cultural sample consisting of 412 Chinese (209 mothers and 203 fathers) and 418 Belgian (209 mothers and 209 fathers) parents of 14-year-old adolescents, we found that social pressure and unfulfilled dreams were related positively to child-invested contingent self-esteem which, in turn, was related to psychologically controlling parenting. Moreover, the hypothesized between-country differences in psychologically controlling parenting and child-invested contingent self-esteem were largely explained by between-country differences in parents’ experiences of social pressure and unfulfilled dreams. Findings are discussed in light of the influence of the broader society on parents’ self-worth and parenting practices.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Does Psychological Need Satisfaction Matter When Environmental or Financial Safety are at Risk?
- Author
-
Maarten Vansteenkiste, Jasper Van Assche, Bart Soenens, Wim Beyers, and Beiwen Chen
- Subjects
AUTONOMY ,Need Desire ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Well-being ,Social Sciences ,CHILDREN ,Determination Theory ,Young adult ,Competence (human resources) ,Self-determination theory ,media_common ,HUMAN-MOTIVATION ,HAPPINESS ,SECURITY ,Finance ,INDEPENDENCE ,business.industry ,SELF-DETERMINATION THEORY ,DETERMINATION THEORY PERSPECTIVE ,SOUTH-AFRICA ,CHOICE ,Basic Psychological Need Satisfaction ,Self ,Happiness ,Job satisfaction ,Positive psychology ,Safety ,Psychology ,business ,Social psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Autonomy - Abstract
Grounded in Self-Determination Theory, the present study addressed the question whether the relation between satisfaction of the psychological needs for relatedness, competence, and autonomy and well-being would be constrained by satisfaction of the need for safety. In Study 1, we investigated environmental safety in a sample of young adults (N = 224) in South Africa, a country known for its low public safety. In Study 2, we focused on financial safety within a socio-economically deprived adult Chinese sample (N = 357). Although safety satisfaction yielded a positive relation to well-being in both studies, satisfaction of the psychological needs contributed to well-being above and beyond safety satisfaction and its contribution was not dependent upon the level of safety satisfaction. Further, across both studies, individuals high in safety satisfaction desired less psychological need satisfaction. Supplementary analyses in Study 2 indicated that whereas financial safety yielded a positive relation to well-being, materialism yielded a negative association. Together, these results point to the important role of basic psychological need satisfaction beyond safety satisfaction in the prediction of well-being.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Does Parental Autonomy Support Relate to Adolescent Autonomy? An In-Depth Examination of a Seemingly Simple Question
- Author
-
Beiwen Chen, Maarten Vansteenkiste, Bart Soenens, Stijn Van Petegem, and Kyriaki Fousiani
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,Child rearing ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Independence ,Developmental psychology ,Cultural diversity ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Parenting styles ,Cross-cultural ,Measurement invariance ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Self-determination theory ,Autonomy ,media_common - Abstract
In contemporary research on autonomy development, autonomy has been defined as independence (vs. dependence) or as self-endorsed (vs. controlled) functioning. Analogously, perceived parental autonomy support involves either perceived parental promotion of independence (PI) or perceived parental promotion of volitional functioning (PVF). The primary aim of the present study among Belgian and Greek adolescents ( N = 658; 58% girls; M age = 16.3 years) was to examine associations between the two types of parental autonomy support, on one hand, and the two types of adolescent autonomy, on the other hand. The secondary aim was to investigate the moderating role of various background variables (i.e., gender, country of residence, and age) in these associations. As hypothesized, perceived parental PVF was related to adolescents’ self-endorsed (vs. controlled) motives. The relation between perceived parental PI and adolescent independence was qualified by an interaction with perceived parental PVF. Finally, although mean-level differences in the study constructs were found across gender, country, and adolescent age, the structural associations among constructs were invariant across these demographic groupings. These findings provide further insights in the complex dynamics involved in adolescent autonomy development in multiple national contexts.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Autonomy in Family Decision Making for Chinese Adolescents
- Author
-
Maarten Vansteenkiste, Bart Soenens, Wim Beyers, Beiwen Chen, and Stijn Van Petegem
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Operationalization ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Collectivism ,Independence ,Developmental psychology ,Anthropology ,Function (engineering) ,Psychology ,Association (psychology) ,Social psychology ,Autonomy ,Self-determination theory ,media_common ,Meaning (linguistics) - Abstract
The present study focused on the function of autonomy for individuals from a collectivistic culture, thereby differentiating between two prevailing conceptualizations of autonomy—namely, autonomy as independence and autonomy as self-endorsed functioning. Participants were 573 Chinese adolescents from both urban and rural regions. Autonomy as independence (versus dependence) was operationalized as the degree of independent decision making within the family, whereas autonomy as self-endorsed (versus controlled) functioning was operationalized in terms of the degree of self-endorsement reflected in motives underlying both independent and dependent decision making. Basic psychological need satisfaction was examined as an explanatory mechanism (i.e., mediator) of the association between autonomy and well-being. Results showed that relatively more self-endorsed motives for both independent and dependent decision making yielded a unique positive relation with psychological well-being, with psychological need satisfaction playing an intervening role in these associations. In contrast, the degree of independent decision making as such did not yield any significant relations with well-being or need satisfaction. Moreover, individual differences in collectivistic cultural orientation did not moderate any of the above associations. Discussion focuses on the distinction between the two viewpoints of autonomy and their meaning for Chinese adolescents.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Basic psychological need satisfaction, need frustration, and need strength across four cultures
- Author
-
Maarten Vansteenkiste, Liesbet Boone, Edward L. Deci, Joke Verstuyf, Willy Lens, Richard M. Ryan, Bart Duriez, Athanasios Mouratidis, Jolene van der Kaap-Deeder, Bart Soenens, Stijn Van Petegem, Kennon M. Sheldon, Wim Beyers, Lennia Matos, and Beiwen Chen
- Subjects
Social Psychology ,Need theory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Psychological well-being ,Cultural diversity ,Deci ,Well-being ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Competence (human resources) ,Autonomy ,Self-determination theory ,media_common - Abstract
The present study investigated whether satis- faction and frustration of the psychological needs for autonomy, relatedness, and competence, as identified within Basic Psychological Need Theory (BPNT; Deci and Ryan, Psychol Inquiry 11:227-268, 2000; Ryan and Deci, Psychol Inquiry 11:319-338, 2000), contributes to participants' well-being and ill-being, regardless of their cultural back- ground and interpersonal differences in need strength, as indexed by either need valuation (i.e., the stated importance of the need to the person) or need desire (i.e., the desire to get a need met). In Study 1, involving late adolescents from Belgium and China (total N = 685; Mean age = 17 years), autonomy and competence satisfaction had unique associations with well-being and individual differences in need valuation did not moderate these associations. Study 2 involved participants from four culturally diverse nations (Belgium, China, USA, and Peru; total N = 1,051; Mean age = 20 years). Results provided evidence for the mea- surement equivalence of an adapted scale tapping into both need satisfaction and need frustration. Satisfaction of each of the three needs was found to contribute uniquely to the prediction of well-being, whereas frustration of each of the three needs contributed uniquely to the prediction of ill- being. Consistent with Study 1, the effects of need satis- faction and need frustration were found to be equivalent across the four countries and were not moderated by indi- vidual differences in the desire for need satisfaction. These findings underscore BPNT's universality claim, which states that the satisfaction of basic needs for autonomy, relatedness, and competence represent essential nutrients for optimal functioning across cultures and across individ- ual differences in need strength.
- Published
- 2015
13. Self-Determination Theory and HCI Games Research: Unfulfilled Promises and Unquestioned Paradigms.
- Author
-
Tyack, April and Mekler, Elisa D.
- Subjects
HUMAN-computer interaction ,CONTROL (Psychology) ,HUMAN behavior ,EMPLOYEE attitudes ,REINFORCEMENT (Psychology) ,AVATARS (Virtual reality) ,MOBILE learning ,VIRTUAL communities - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Developing the Informed Learning Scale: Measuring Information Literacy in Higher Education.
- Author
-
Flierl, Michael, Maybee, Clarence, and Bonem, Emily
- Subjects
LEARNING ,INFORMATION literacy ,INFORMATION literacy research ,HIGHER education ,ACADEMIC libraries - Abstract
Academic libraries continue to face challenges communicating their value. One dimension of this challenge is in demonstrating how information literacy relates to important measures of student learning, like course grades and motivation. This study documents the development and exploratory pilot testing of the Informed Learning scale--which is intended to produce data for institutional reporting purposes at scale in alignment with contemporary IL theory, specifically Informed Learning. Preliminary findings include small correlations between the Informed Learning scale and course grades and moderate correlations between the scale and student perceptions of their learning climate and self-determined motivation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Exploring relatedness in single-player video game play.
- Author
-
Tyack, April and Wyeth, Peta
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The Moderating Role of Vertical Collectivism in South-Korean Adolescents’ Perceptions of and Responses to Autonomy-Supportive and Controlling Parenting.
- Author
-
Soenens, Bart, Park, Seong-Yeon, Mabbe, Elien, Vansteenkiste, Maarten, Chen, Beiwen, Van Petegem, Stijn, and Brenning, Katrijn
- Subjects
ADOLESCENCE ,COLLECTIVISM (Social psychology) ,TEENAGE parents ,PARENTING ,SENSORY perception ,INDIVIDUAL differences - Abstract
Research increasingly demonstrates that associations between autonomy-relevant parenting and adolescent adjustment generalize across cultures. Yet, there is still an ongoing debate about the role of culture in these effects of autonomy-relevant parenting. The current study aimed to contribute to a more nuanced perspective on this debate by addressing cultural variability in micro-processes involved in autonomy-relevant parenting and, more specifically, in adolescents’ appraisals of and responses to parental behavior. In this vignette-based experimental study, involving 137 South-Korean adolescents (54% female, mean age = 16 years), we examined whether individual differences in vertical collectivism affect the association between descriptions of potentially autonomy-supportive and controlling parenting practices and (a) appraisals of these practices (in terms of perceived autonomy support and control and experiences of autonomy need satisfaction and frustration), and (b) anticipated responses to these practices (i.e., negotiation, submissive compliance, and oppositional defiance). Participants in the autonomy-supportive condition reported more perceived autonomy support and autonomy satisfaction and lower perceived control and autonomy need frustration than participants in the controlling condition. Collectivism moderated between-vignette effects on perceived control and autonomy need frustration such that the differences between the autonomy-supportive and controlling vignettes were less pronounced (yet still significant) among adolescents scoring higher on collectivism. Collectivism did not moderate effects of the vignettes on the responses to parenting, but yielded a main effect, with collectivism relating to more submissive compliance and less oppositional defiance. Overall, the results suggest that both universal and culture-specific processes are involved in autonomy-relevant socialization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Chinese Education Examined via the Lens of Self-Determination.
- Author
-
Yu, Shi, Chen, Beiwen, Levesque-Bristol, Chantal, and Vansteenkiste, Maarten
- Subjects
CHINESE students ,SELF-determination theory ,DEEP learning ,EDUCATIONAL psychology ,SUSTAINABLE development ,COUNTERARGUMENTS ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Chinese education is controversial: it is not only lauded for Chinese students’ high test achievements but also criticized for curbing students’ deep learning and development into well-rounded individuals. In the current paper, we propose that self-determination theory (SDT) serves as a useful framework for anatomizing Chinese educational ecology, especially understanding the fundamental developmental costs behind Chinese students’ high test scores. In the first part, we provide an up-to-date overview of SDT, which proposes that a growth-oriented motivation fueled by basic psychological needs underlies human development; hence, the role of education is to provide environmental support for these needs. After reviewing research evidence, we conclude that SDT serves as a valid theoretical framework for analyzing Chinese education. In the second part, we apply the lens of SDT to better understand the motivational dynamics that prevail in Chinese education. In doing so, we first primarily focus on the distal institutional level, thereby examining in detail how the high-stakes testing system headed by Gaokao fails to support—and may even thwart—basic psychological needs; we also address counterarguments favoring Gaokao, such as heightened involvement and alignment. We then scrutinize the pros and cons at the proximal level of the student environment—i.e., teachers and parents. Finally, we discuss existing reform attempts, which seemingly have very limited effectiveness. We propose that awareness of the problem and more holistic change are needed to realize more effective and sustainable change in Chinese education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Social Pressure and Unfulfilled Dreams Among Chinese and Belgian Parents.
- Author
-
Wuyts, Dorien, Chen, Beiwen, Vansteenkiste, Maarten, and Soenens, Bart
- Abstract
Chinese parents have been found to use more psychological control toward their children than Western parents. The present study examined whether Chinese, relative to Belgian, parents’ experiences of social pressure to be an achievement-promoting parent and their own unfulfilled dreams could account for this country-level difference in psychologically controlling parenting. In turn, the association of social pressure and unfulfilled dreams with parental psychological control was expected to be accounted for (i.e., mediated) by child-invested contingent self-esteem. In a cross-cultural sample consisting of 412 Chinese (209 mothers and 203 fathers) and 418 Belgian (209 mothers and 209 fathers) parents of 14-year-old adolescents, we found that social pressure and unfulfilled dreams were related positively to child-invested contingent self-esteem which, in turn, was related to psychologically controlling parenting. Moreover, the hypothesized between-country differences in psychologically controlling parenting and child-invested contingent self-esteem were largely explained by between-country differences in parents’ experiences of social pressure and unfulfilled dreams. Findings are discussed in light of the influence of the broader society on parents’ self-worth and parenting practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Does Psychological Need Satisfaction Matter When Environmental or Financial Safety are at Risk?
- Author
-
Chen, Beiwen, Assche, Jasper, Vansteenkiste, Maarten, Soenens, Bart, and Beyers, Wim
- Subjects
SELF-determination theory ,SATISFACTION ,SAFETY ,PUBLIC safety ,WELL-being ,SOCIAL psychology ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Grounded in self-determination theory, the present study addressed the question whether the relation between satisfaction of the psychological needs for relatedness, competence, and autonomy and well-being would be constrained by satisfaction of the need for safety. In Study 1, we investigated environmental safety in a sample of young adults ( N = 224) in South Africa, a country known for its low public safety. In Study 2, we focused on financial safety within a socio-economically deprived adult Chinese sample ( N = 357). Although safety satisfaction yielded a positive relation to well-being in both studies, satisfaction of the psychological needs contributed to well-being above and beyond safety satisfaction and its contribution was not dependent upon the level of safety satisfaction. Further, across both studies, individuals high in safety satisfaction desired less psychological need satisfaction. Supplementary analyses in Study 2 indicated that whereas financial safety yielded a positive relation to well-being, materialism yielded a negative association. Together, these results point to the important role of basic psychological need satisfaction beyond safety satisfaction in the prediction of well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Basic psychological need satisfaction, need frustration, and need strength across four cultures.
- Author
-
Chen, Beiwen, Vansteenkiste, Maarten, Beyers, Wim, Boone, Liesbet, Deci, Edward, Kaap-Deeder, Jolene, Duriez, Bart, Lens, Willy, Matos, Lennia, Mouratidis, Athanasios, Ryan, Richard, Sheldon, Kennon, Soenens, Bart, Petegem, Stijn, and Verstuyf, Joke
- Subjects
NEED (Psychology) ,SATISFACTION ,FRUSTRATION ,CROSS-cultural differences ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,RELATEDNESS (Psychology) ,INDIVIDUAL differences - Abstract
The present study investigated whether satisfaction and frustration of the psychological needs for autonomy, relatedness, and competence, as identified within Basic Psychological Need Theory (BPNT; Deci and Ryan, Psychol Inquiry 11:227-268, ; Ryan and Deci, Psychol Inquiry 11:319-338, ), contributes to participants' well-being and ill-being, regardless of their cultural background and interpersonal differences in need strength, as indexed by either need valuation (i.e., the stated importance of the need to the person) or need desire (i.e., the desire to get a need met). In Study 1, involving late adolescents from Belgium and China (total N = 685; Mean age = 17 years), autonomy and competence satisfaction had unique associations with well-being and individual differences in need valuation did not moderate these associations. Study 2 involved participants from four culturally diverse nations (Belgium, China, USA, and Peru; total N = 1,051; Mean age = 20 years). Results provided evidence for the measurement equivalence of an adapted scale tapping into both need satisfaction and need frustration. Satisfaction of each of the three needs was found to contribute uniquely to the prediction of well-being, whereas frustration of each of the three needs contributed uniquely to the prediction of ill-being. Consistent with Study 1, the effects of need satisfaction and need frustration were found to be equivalent across the four countries and were not moderated by individual differences in the desire for need satisfaction. These findings underscore BPNT's universality claim, which states that the satisfaction of basic needs for autonomy, relatedness, and competence represent essential nutrients for optimal functioning across cultures and across individual differences in need strength. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Perception of parents as demonstrating the inherent merit of their values: Relations with self-congruence and subjective well-being.
- Author
-
Yu, Shi, Assor, Avi, and Liu, Xiangping
- Subjects
PARENTING research ,SELF-congruence ,WELL-being ,EUDAIMONISM ,QUALITY of life ,SOCIAL support - Abstract
This study focuses on the parenting practice of inherent value demonstration ( IVD), involving parents' tendency to express their values in behaviours and appear satisfied and vital while doing so. Data from Chinese college students ( n = 89) confirmed the hypothesis that offspring's perception of their parents as engaged in IVD predicts offspring's subjective well-being ( SWB) through sense of self-congruence. Importantly, these relations emerged also when controlling for fundamental autonomy-supportive ( FAS) parenting practices such as taking children's perspective, minimising control and allowing choice. These findings are consistent with the view that parents concerned with their children's sense of autonomy may do well to engage in IVD in addition to more fundamental autonomy-supportive practices. Future research may examine the role of IVD in promoting authentic values that serve as an internal compass that guides children to act in ways that feel self-congruent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Editorial Acknowledgments.
- Subjects
- ABAIED, Jamie, BABEL, Molly, CABELL, Sonia
- Abstract
People whom the editor would like to thank for their assistance in the reviewing manuscripts for publication in the November 1, 2014 issue of "Child Development" are mentioned.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Does Parental Autonomy Support Relate to Adolescent Autonomy? An In-Depth Examination of a Seemingly Simple Question.
- Author
-
Fousiani, Kyriaki, Van Petegem, Stijn, Soenens, Bart, Vansteenkiste, Maarten, and Chen, Beiwen
- Subjects
AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,ADOLESCENCE ,PARENT-child relationships ,TEENAGER attitudes ,ADOLESCENT psychology - Abstract
In contemporary research on autonomy development, autonomy has been defined as independence (vs. dependence) or as self-endorsed (vs. controlled) functioning. Analogously, perceived parental autonomy support involves either perceived parental promotion of independence (PI) or perceived parental promotion of volitional functioning (PVF). The primary aim of the present study among Belgian and Greek adolescents (N = 658; 58% girls; M age = 16.3 years) was to examine associations between the two types of parental autonomy support, on one hand, and the two types of adolescent autonomy, on the other hand. The secondary aim was to investigate the moderating role of various background variables (i.e., gender, country of residence, and age) in these associations. As hypothesized, perceived parental PVF was related to adolescents’ self-endorsed (vs. controlled) motives. The relation between perceived parental PI and adolescent independence was qualified by an interaction with perceived parental PVF. Finally, although mean-level differences in the study constructs were found across gender, country, and adolescent age, the structural associations among constructs were invariant across these demographic groupings. These findings provide further insights in the complex dynamics involved in adolescent autonomy development in multiple national contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Autonomy in Family Decision Making for Chinese Adolescents: Disentangling the Dual Meaning of Autonomy.
- Author
-
Chen, Beiwen, Vansteenkiste, Maarten, Beyers, Wim, Soenens, Bart, and Van Petegem, Stijn
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Nuclear Energy : Perception or Reality?
- Author
-
Emrah Akyüz and Emrah Akyüz
- Subjects
- Nuclear energy
- Abstract
Nuclear energy is the most controversial energy source in the 21st century. Both nuclear energy advocates and nuclear energy opponents try to manipulate society by providing incomplete or incorrect information about nuclear energy. Nuclear Energy: Perception or Reality? provides readers with objective information about both the advantages and disadvantages of nuclear energy and explains many common myths about it.
- Published
- 2023
26. حياة رائعة
- Author
-
فرانك مارتيلا and فرانك مارتيلا
- Abstract
أين كنتَ عندما أصابتكَ لا جدوى الحياة؟ هل كان ذلك أثناء عشائك الثالث الذي تجهزه في الميكروويف خلال أسبوع؟ حين كنت تفكر مليًّا في نكهة'الكاتشاب'وفوائده الصحية؟ ماذا عن ضغطك على زر الإرسال الساعة الثانية صباحًا، بعد انتهائك من مهمة عمل طارئة لتكتشف فقط أن العالم لن يكون على الأرجح قد تحسَّن بقدر شبر واحد على ضوء إنجازك؟ ربما فاجعة مغيرة للحياة، جعلتك تدرك أنك لم تبذل الجهد الكافي للتفكير فيما تريده حقًّا منها. أو ربما صحوت ببساطة ذات نهار محدقًا في ذاتك في مرآة الحمام، وتعجبت إذا ما كانت هناك أي إضافة لهذا الشيء القصير المجنون المدعو الحياة.
- Published
- 2023
27. A Vida É Maravilhosa: O Caminho para Uma Vida Mais Significativa
- Author
-
Frank Martela and Frank Martela
- Abstract
Um guia inspirador que oferece ferramentas práticas e facilmente aplicáveis para uma experiência de vida mais positiva, gratificante e significativa. O que dá sentido à nossa vida? Como podemos lidar com a ausência de um propósito existencial? Valerá a pena focarmo-nos na busca permanente de felicidade? Perceber o sentido da própria existência é fundamental para vivermos com motivação, satisfação e alegria e, sobretudo, para conseguirmos tirar o máximo partido da vida. Vários estudos sugerem que as pessoas com uma forte noção do seu propósito existencial têm mais saúde e vivem mais e melhor. Neste livro, Frank Martela esclarece por que motivo sentimos uma insatisfação permanente e estamos constantemente à procura de algo mais. Numa série de reflexões perspicazes e motivadoras, dotadas de um refinado sentido de humor, o autor analisa as grandes questões existenciais no contexto da vida moderna, oferecendo uma nova abordagem para alcançarmos uma vida mais plena, que passa por fazermos coisas significativas para nós (realização pessoal)de uma forma que nos torne significativos para outras pessoas (realização social). «Um livro para ler vezes sem conta na viagem de descoberta do nosso propósito.» Daniel H. Pink, autor bestseller internacional «Apoiando-se habilmente em áreas como a psicologia, a filosofia e a literatura, este livro irá ajudá-lo a viver uma vida com significado. Uma leitura tão gratificante e divertida quanto enriquecedora.» Emma Seppala, diretora científica do Centro de Educação e Pesquisa sobre Compaixão e Altruísmo da Universidade de Stanford «Um livro brilhante e encantador que aborda as questões mais grandiosas da vida com simplicidade, humor e perspicácia. Se tem curiosidade sobre o sentido da vida — e quem não tem? —, este livro é um recurso valioso.» Roy F. Baumeister, autor bestseller internacional «Neste ensaio edificante, fruto de um cuidadoso trabalho de pesquisa, Frank Martela reúne algumas das ideias mais fascinantes da história, da filosofia e da psicologia para abordar a questão mais premente de todas: o que torna a vida significativa.» Emily Esfahani Smith, autora bestseller internacional
- Published
- 2022
28. Una vita meravigliosa : Come vivere un’esistenza ricca di significato
- Author
-
Frank Martela and Frank Martela
- Abstract
Qual è il senso della vita? È un valore stabile e oggettivo, o qualcosa di inevitabilmente fluido e arbitrario? In base a quali principi dobbiamo orientare le nostre azioni e i nostri rapporti con gli altri? Se in passato la visione del mondo tradizionale, fondata sulla religione, sapeva dare risposte ai grandi interrogativi dell'esistenza, nella società contemporanea, sempre più individualistica e secolarizzata, la nostra sete di significato si fa ogni giorno più intensa. In questo libro, scritto con un linguaggio accessibile ma concettualmente rigoroso, il giovane filosofo Frank Martela ci accompagna in un viaggio coinvolgente che ripercorre la storia del pensiero occidentale moderno, rivisitato attraverso esperienze quotidiane, aneddoti, film, ma anche con gli strumenti delle più avanzate ricerche psicologiche e sociali sui grandi fenomeni del nostro tempo. Il percorso verso un'esistenza più consapevole e appagante, ci insegna, può cominciare in ogni momento, a patto di riuscire a liberarci da certi preconcetti e ossessioni che impediscono alla nostra personalità più autentica di fiorire: dobbiamo solo volerlo.
- Published
- 2021
29. Self-Determination Theory : Basic Psychological Needs in Motivation, Development, and Wellness
- Author
-
Richard M. Ryan, Edward L. Deci, Richard M. Ryan, and Edward L. Deci
- Subjects
- Autonomy (Psychology), Motivation (Psychology)
- Abstract
Self-determination theory (SDT) provides a framework for understanding the factors that promote motivation and healthy psychological and behavioral functioning. In this authoritative work, the codevelopers of the theory comprehensively examine SDT's conceptual underpinnings (including its six mini-theories), empirical evidence base, and practical applications across the lifespan. The volume synthesizes a vast body of research on how supporting--or thwarting--people's basic needs for competence, relatedness, and autonomy affects their development and well-being. Chapters cover implications for practice and policy in education, health care, psychotherapy, sport, and the workplace.
- Published
- 2017
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