Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Psychological hardiness, alternatively referred to as personality hardiness or cognitive hardiness in the literature, is a personality style first introduced by Suzanne C. Kobasa in 1979. [1] Kobasa described a pattern of personality characteristics that distinguished managers and executives who remained healthy under life stress, as compared ...
Mental toughness is a measure of individual psychological resilience and confidence that may predict success in sport, education, and in the workplace. [1] The concept emerged in the context of sports training and sports psychology, as one of a set of attributes that allow a person to become a better athlete and able to cope with difficult training and difficult competitive situations and ...
Sisu is extraordinary determination in the face of extreme adversity, and courage that is presented typically in situations where success is unlikely. It expresses itself in taking action against the odds, and displaying courage and resoluteness in the face of adversity; in other words, deciding on a course of action, and then adhering to it even if repeated failures ensue.
In psychology, grit is a positive, non-cognitive trait based on a person's perseverance of effort combined with their passion for a particular long-term goal or end state (a powerful motivation to achieve an objective). This perseverance of effort helps people overcome obstacles or challenges to accomplishment and drives people to achieve.
These groups included a community sample, primary care outpatients, general psychiatric outpatients, a clinical trial of generalized anxiety disorder, and two clinical trials of PTSD. [1] The authors drew inspiration for the scale's content from the work of previous researchers of hardiness, most notably S.C. Kobasa [2] and M. Rutter. [3]
The Beethoven Factor: The New Positive Psychology of Hardiness, Happiness, Healing, and Hope, [8] Hampton Roads Publishing Company, 2003; The Heart's Code: Tapping the Wisdom and Power of Our Heart Energy, [9] Broadway Books, 1999, ISBN 978-0767900959; Super Immunity : Master Your Emotions and Improve Your Health 1988, ISBN 0449133966
Hardiness may refer to: Hardiness (plants), the ability of plants to survive adverse growing conditions Hardiness zone, area in which a category of plants is capable of growing, as defined by the minimum temperature of that area; Psychological resilience or mental resilience, positive capacity of people to cope with stress and catastrophe
Psychological resilience, or mental resilience, is the ability to cope mentally and emotionally with a crisis, or to return to pre-crisis status quickly. [1]The term was popularized in the 1970s and 1980s by psychologist Emmy Werner as she conducted a forty-year-long study of a cohort of Hawaiian children who came from low socioeconomic status backgrounds.