Results 201 to 210 of about 89,179 (263)

External Locus of Control in Children of Alcoholics

Psychological Reports, 1991
The relationship of type of home of origin [alcoholic parent(s) versus nonalcoholic parent(s)] to locus of control was assessed. Perceived level of parental alcohol abuse (MAST score) did not predict 121 students' locus of control. However, external orientation was significantly and positively correlated with having a parent who drank heavily and ...
V N, McNeill, B O, Gilbert
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Internal-External Locus of Control: A Bibliography

Psychological Reports, 1971
Several methods of search yielded for the period 1954 through 1969 11 tests of internal-external control, 169 published papers and books, and 170 references to unpublished work.
W F, Throop, A P, MacDonald
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Internal-external locus of control and guilt

Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1976
This study examined the relationship between internal-external locus of control and guilt. Ss were 65 male and 137 college undergraduates who completed the Rotter I-E scale and the Mosher Hostility and Morality-Conscience Guilt Scales. Results demonstrated that internals reported a higher degree of hostility guilt than externals.
L J, Breen, T J, Prociuk
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Subjective Stress and Internal-External Locus of Control

Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1981
Lester2 reported that self-reported stress was greater for individuals who had an external locus of control. The present scudy sought to explore this relationship in more depth using Levenson's (1974) modified internal-external locus of control scale. A questionnaire was given anonymously to 42 investigatory and administrative state police officers at ...
D, Lester, E, Tappert
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Hopelessness, internal-external locus of control, and depression

Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1976
This research examined the relationship between hopelessness, defined as a system of negative expectancies about the future, and two theoretically relevant constructs: internal-external locus of control, and depression. Two samples of 67 and 44 undergraduates were administered the Beck, et al. Hopelessness Scale, the Rotter Internal-External Scale, and
T J, Prociuk, L J, Breen, R J, Lussier
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Internal-External Locus of Control and Verbal Fluency

Psychological Reports, 1969
84 female Ss were given the I-E Control Scale and a modified form of Thurstone's word fluency (W) test in counterbalanced order. Ss were classified as “Internals” or “Externals” by division at the median. As hypothesized, the mean fluency scores of Internals were significantly higher than those of Externals for each minute of work.
M, Brecher, F L, Denmark
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Glossolalia and Internal-External Locus of Control

Journal of Psychology and Theology, 1977
A group of glossolalics was compared with a group of nonglossolalics on Rotter's Internal-External Locus of Control Scale. The sample of glossolalics was drawn from Foursquare Gospel and Assembly of God churches, the nonglossolalics were Methodists. There were 95 glossolalics and 79 nonglossolalics.
Jesse E. Coulson, Ray W. Johnson
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