1.The relationship study on the relationship between procrastination behaviors and bad personality disposition.
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2006;27(1):29-32
OBJECTIVETo explore the relationship between procrastinate behavior of college students and bad personality disposition.
METHODS566 college students were selected and followed through adopting the measurement on the procrastination scale of college students and Personality Disorders Questionnaire (PDQ-4).
RESULTSResults showed that male and female college students did not have remarkable difference in terms of procrastination. High level procrastinators had a higher level of scores on bad personality disposition. In addition, College students' procrastination had close relationship with bad personality disposition (r = 0.341, P < 0.001).
CONCLUSIONCollege students' procrastination had close relationship with bad personality disposition which did not match the findings from McCown's results on american college students.
China ; Cross-Cultural Comparison ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Personality ; Personality Disorders ; Personality Inventory ; statistics & numerical data ; Psychometrics ; Students ; psychology ; Time Management ; psychology ; United States ; Universities
2.Personality Types and Application to Medical Education in Medical Students.
Hye Jin PARK ; Min Seo KIM ; Bo Min JEONG ; Won Kyun PARK
Keimyung Medical Journal 2018;37(1):31-37
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) is a personality type test book, which is widely used in the field of personal counseling, team organization, school education and research. This study carried out MBTI of 361 medical students in the second grade of premedical course of Keimyung University School of Medicine from 2014 to 2018, and analyzed the data to use them for the students' education. The personality type was mostly distributed to ISTJ, ISTP, ESTP and ESTJ in order among 16 types. According to preference tendency, it was found out that the introverted type was extroverted, the recognition type was intuition type, the thinking type was emotional type, and the recognition type was more distributed than the judgment type. The psychological functions were ST, SF, NF, NT. MBTI type analysis of medical students shows that it is possible to organize members in group activities to improve their ability to understand themselves and understand others in class scenes. In addition, we expect to be able to design for improvement of stress management, conflict management, and communication ability. In the career counseling scene, in addition to the MBTI data analysis, it is expected that it will be possible to recommend a major suitable for the student personality type in parallel with other psychological tests. In addition, we expect to study the preferred field of study, satisfaction with the major in the future research by continuous data accumulation and analysis.
Communication
;
Counseling
;
Education
;
Education, Medical*
;
Humans
;
Intuition
;
Judgment
;
Personality Inventory
;
Psychological Tests
;
Statistics as Topic
;
Students, Medical*
;
Thinking
;
Vocational Guidance
3.Relations between Eastern Four Pillars Theory and Western Measures of Personality Traits.
Seung Ah JUNG ; Chang Soon YANG
Yonsei Medical Journal 2015;56(3):698-704
PURPOSE: The present study investigated the validity of personality classification using four pillars theory, a tradition in China and northeastern Asia. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Four pillars analyses were performed for 148 adults on the basis of their birth year, month, day, and hour. Participants completed two personality tests, the Korean version of Temperament and Character Inventory-Revised-Short Version (TCI) and the Korean Inventory of Interpersonal Problems; scores were correlated with four pillars classification elements. Mean difference tests (e.g., t-test, ANOVA) were compared with groups classified by four pillars index. RESULTS: There were no significant correlations between personality scale scores and total yin/yang number (i.e., the 8 heavenly or earthly stems), and no significant between-groups results for classifications by yin/yang day stem and the five elements. There were significant but weak (r=0.18-0.29) correlations between the five elements and personality scale scores. For the six gods and personality scales, there were significant but weak (r=0.18-0.25) correlations. Features predicted by four pillars theory were most consistent when participants were grouped according to the yin/yang of the day stem and dominance of yin/yang numbers in the eight heavenly or earthly stems. CONCLUSION: Although the major criteria of four pillars theory were not independently correlated with personality scale scores, correlations emerged when participants were grouped according to the composite yin/yang variable. Our results suggest the utility of four pillars theory (beyond fortune telling or astrology) for classifying personality traits and making behavioral predictions.
Adolescent
;
Adult
;
*Character
;
China
;
Factor Analysis, Statistical
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Personality/*classification
;
Personality Inventory/*statistics & numerical data
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Republic of Korea
;
*Temperament
;
Young Adult
4.Development of the Stress-induced Cognition Scale.
Kyung Bong KOH ; Joong Kyu PARK ; Sunghee CHO
Yonsei Medical Journal 2006;47(3):384-392
The objective of this study was to develop the stress-induced cognition scale (SCS). A preliminary survey was conducted on 109 healthy adults to obtain cognitive stress responses. Then, 215 healthy subjects completed a preliminary questionnaire. A comparison was made regarding cognitive stress responses among 73 patients with depressive disorders and 215 healthy subjects. Factor analysis of the SCS yielded 3 subscales: extreme thought, aggressive-hostile thought, and self-depreciative thought. The test-retest reliability for the 3 subscales and the total score was significantly high, ranging from 0.87 to 0.95. The Cronbach's alphafor the 3 subscales and total score ranged from 0.82 to 0.94. The convergent validity was calculated by correlating the 3 subscales and total score of the SCS with the total score of the global assessment of recent stress (GARS) scale, the perceived stress questionnaire (PSQ), and the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R). The correlations were all at significant levels. The depressive disorder group scored significantly higher than the healthy control group in all the subscale scores and total scores of the SCS. Female subjects were significantly higher than males in the total scores of the SCS. These results indicate that the SCS is highly reliable and valid, and that it can be utilized as an effective measure for research related to cognitive assessment.
Stress, Psychological/*psychology
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Questionnaires/standards
;
Personality Inventory/standards/*statistics & numerical data
;
Middle Aged
;
Male
;
Humans
;
Female
;
Depressive Disorder/*psychology
;
*Cognition
;
Adult
;
*Adaptation, Psychological
5.Development of the Stress-induced Cognition Scale.
Kyung Bong KOH ; Joong Kyu PARK ; Sunghee CHO
Yonsei Medical Journal 2006;47(3):384-392
The objective of this study was to develop the stress-induced cognition scale (SCS). A preliminary survey was conducted on 109 healthy adults to obtain cognitive stress responses. Then, 215 healthy subjects completed a preliminary questionnaire. A comparison was made regarding cognitive stress responses among 73 patients with depressive disorders and 215 healthy subjects. Factor analysis of the SCS yielded 3 subscales: extreme thought, aggressive-hostile thought, and self-depreciative thought. The test-retest reliability for the 3 subscales and the total score was significantly high, ranging from 0.87 to 0.95. The Cronbach's alphafor the 3 subscales and total score ranged from 0.82 to 0.94. The convergent validity was calculated by correlating the 3 subscales and total score of the SCS with the total score of the global assessment of recent stress (GARS) scale, the perceived stress questionnaire (PSQ), and the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R). The correlations were all at significant levels. The depressive disorder group scored significantly higher than the healthy control group in all the subscale scores and total scores of the SCS. Female subjects were significantly higher than males in the total scores of the SCS. These results indicate that the SCS is highly reliable and valid, and that it can be utilized as an effective measure for research related to cognitive assessment.
Stress, Psychological/*psychology
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Questionnaires/standards
;
Personality Inventory/standards/*statistics & numerical data
;
Middle Aged
;
Male
;
Humans
;
Female
;
Depressive Disorder/*psychology
;
*Cognition
;
Adult
;
*Adaptation, Psychological
6.Validation Study of Tripartite Model of Anxiety and Depression in Children and Adolescents: Clinical Sample in Korea.
Jae Won YANG ; Sungdo D HONG ; Yoo Sook JOUNG ; Ji Hae KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2006;21(6):1098-1102
Although the currently available literature has provided some empirical support for a tripartite model of child and adolescent anxiety and depression, one of the limitations of these studies was that they have been conducted in America, primarily with Caucasians. In order to make this model more applicable to diverse ethnic and cultural groups, this study used a tripartite model for child and adolescent anxiety and depression in Korea, using confirmatory factor analysis with logically selected items from the Revised Children's Manifest Anxiety Scale (RCMAS), as well as the Children's Depression Inventory (CDI). The results indicated that the model fit of a threefactor model was superior to one- and two-factor models. In addition, the findings of discriminant analysis demonstrated that the correct classification rate with three factors of the tripartite model was superior to the classification rate achievable using CDI and RCMAS. In a departure from Clark and Watson's hypothesis, however, the correlations of three factors were significantly higher than had been expected. The results are discussed on the basis of cultural background.
*Questionnaires
;
Personality Inventory/*statistics & numerical data
;
*Models, Psychological
;
Male
;
Korea/epidemiology
;
Humans
;
Female
;
Depression/*diagnosis/epidemiology/*psychology
;
Comorbidity
;
Child
;
Anxiety/*diagnosis/epidemiology/*psychology
;
Adolescent
7.Potential Relationship between Season of Birth and Clinical Characteristics in Major Depressive Disorder in Koreans: Results from the CRESCEND Study.
Seon Cheol PARK ; Jeong Kyu SAKONG ; Bon Hoon KOO ; Jae Min KIM ; Tae Youn JUN ; Min Soo LEE ; Jung Bum KIM ; Hyeon Woo YIM ; Yong Chon PARK
Yonsei Medical Journal 2016;57(3):784-789
We aimed to examine the potential relationship between season of birth (SOB) and clinical characteristics in Korean patients with unipolar non-psychotic major depressive disorder (MDD). Using data from the Clinical Research Center for Depression (CRESCEND) study in South Korea, 891 MDD patients were divided into two groups, those born in spring/summer (n=457) and those born in autumn/winter (n=434). Measurement tools comprising the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, Scale for Suicidal Ideation, Clinical Global Impression of severity, Social and Occupation Functional Assessment Scale, WHO Quality of Life assessment instrument-abbreviated version, Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test, and Temperament and Character Inventory were used to evaluate depression, anxiety, overall symptoms, suicidal ideation, global severity, social function, quality of life, drinking, and temperament and character, respectively. Using independent t-tests for continuous variables and χ2 tests for discrete variables, the clinical characteristics of the two groups were compared. MDD patients born in spring/summer were on average younger at onset of first depressive episode (t=2.084, p=0.038), had greater loss of concentration (χ2=4.589, p=0.032), and were more self-directed (t=2.256, p=0.025) than those born in autumn/winter. Clinically, there was a trend for the MDD patients born in spring/summer to display the contradictory characteristics of more severe clinical course and less illness burden; this may have been partly due to a paradoxical effect of the 5-HT system.
Adult
;
Age of Onset
;
Aged
;
Alcohol Drinking
;
Bipolar Disorder/*diagnosis/*ethnology/psychology
;
Character
;
Cost of Illness
;
Depression
;
Depressive Disorder, Major/*diagnosis/*ethnology/psychology
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Personality Inventory/statistics & numerical data
;
*Quality of Life
;
Republic of Korea/epidemiology
;
*Seasons
;
Temperament
8.A U-shaped Association between Body Mass Index and Psychological Distress on the Multiphasic Personality Inventory: Retrospective Cross-sectional Analysis of 19-year-old Men in Korea.
Taehyun KIM ; Jung Jun KIM ; Mi Yeon KIM ; Shin Kyoung KIM ; Sungwon ROH ; Jeong Seok SEO
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2015;30(6):793-801
Objective personality tests, such as the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI), might be more sensitive to reflect subclinical personality and be more state-dependent in an individual's lifetime, so they are good scales to predict the psychological distress regarding certain states. The aim of this study was to identify the specific pattern between body mass index (BMI) and psychological distress using the objective personality test. For this study, we investigated BMI and the Korean Military Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MPI). A retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted with 19-yr-old examinees who were admitted to the Military Manpower Administration in Korea from February 2007 to January 2010. Of 1,088,107 examinees, we enrolled 771,408 subjects who were psychologically apparent healthy possible-military-service groups. Afterwards, we reviewed and analyzed directly measured BMI and MPI results. In terms of the validity scales, the faking-good subscale showed an inverted U-shaped association, and faking-bad and infrequency subscales showed a U-shaped association with BMI groups. In terms of the neurosis scales, all clinical subscales (anxiety, depression, somatization, and personality disorder) also showed a U-shaped association with BMI groups. For the psychopath scales, the schizophrenia subscale showed a U-shaped association, and the paranoia subscale showed a near-positive correlation with BMI. In conclusion, a specific U-shaped pattern was observed between BMI and the MPI in 19-yr-old men in Korea. Underweight and obesity are related to psychological distress, so supportive advice and education are needed to them.
Adult
;
*Body Mass Index
;
Causality
;
Comorbidity
;
Computer Simulation
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Men's Health
;
Models, Biological
;
Models, Psychological
;
Multiphasic Screening/methods
;
Obesity/*epidemiology/psychology
;
Personality Inventory/*statistics & numerical data
;
Prevalence
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Republic of Korea/epidemiology
;
Risk Factors
;
Sensitivity and Specificity
;
Stress, Psychological/diagnosis/*epidemiology/*psychology
;
Thinness/*epidemiology/psychology
;
Young Adult