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Dive into the research topics where Cecilia Giordano is active.

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Featured researches published by Cecilia Giordano.


Allergy | 2005

CD4+IL-13+ cells in peripheral blood well correlates with the severity of atopic dermatitis in children

S. La Grutta; P. Richiusa; G. Pizzolanti; A. Mattina; Giovanni B. Pajno; R. Citarrella; G. Passalacqua; Cecilia Giordano

Background:  In atopic dermatitis (AD) a Th1/Th2 imbalance has been reported, and interleukin (IL)‐13 seems to play a pivotal role in the inflammatory network. We tried to assess the correlation between the immunological marker CD4+IL‐13+ and the clinical phase of extrinsic AD in children.


Computers in Human Behavior | 2016

Smartphone Addiction Inventory (SPAI)

Laura Pavia; Paola Cavani; Maria Di Blasi; Cecilia Giordano

The Smartphone Addiction Inventory (SPAI) was developed to assess smartphone addiction in Taiwanese university students. The purpose of the current research is to evaluate the factor structure and psychometric properties of the SPAI in Italian university students. A total of 485 university students (29.3% boys) completed the SPAI and the Youngs Internet Addiction Test (IAT).The proposed four-factor model of the SPAI-I was tested by computing CFA, and the results of the goodness of fit indices indicated an ambiguous solution. An exploratory-confirmatory cross validation strategy was applied for a better trimming of SPAI-I factorial structure. Results suggested a five-factor solution that explained 53% of the total variance (Time Spent, Compulsivity, Daily Life Interference, Craving, and Sleep Interference). Excellent internal consistency and five factor correlations were reported for the SPAI-I. This five-factor model showed good convergent validity with the Internet Addiction Disorder Test. Considering that evidence shows that overuse of a smartphone can be associated with adverse and problematic effects, the SPAI-I should be useful for determining its potential for the use in future research in Europe and for comparing the evaluation of smartphone overuse of young European people with other international Asiatic studies that have incorporated the SPAI. The SPAI was tested using factorial analysis procedures in a large sample.The exploratory factor analysis revealed five factors rather than the original four.The SPAI-I showed satisfactory psychometric properties.The SPAI-I is suitable for measuring smartphone addiction.The SPAI-I may help to promote unified research in the smartphone addiction field.


Journal of Youth Studies | 2016

Transition to adulthood and recession: a qualitative study

Maria Di Blasi; Crispino Tosto; Alessandro Marfia; Paola Cavani; Cecilia Giordano

ABSTRACT While the transition to adulthood has been broadly examined, less is known about the impact of economic recession on the well-being and psychosocial functioning of young people. The present study used qualitative interviews with 12 college students to understand their experience. Consensual qualitative research was used to analyse data and develop core themes around young peoples experiences. Interviews focused on how young people perceived the impact of the economic recession on their social context and on emotional, behavioural, and interpersonal dimensions. Although students showed a proactive attitude in dealing with the crisis, findings highlighted a negative impact on psychological functioning characterized by feelings of instability and helplessness and by difficulties in planning for the future. Other general themes emerged, including disengagement from community participation expressed by feelings of isolation, lack of interest, and distrust. Directions for future research and implications for practice are discussed.


World Futures | 2015

The Mafia Boss Yesterday and Today: Psychological Characteristics and Research Data

Cecilia Giordano; Girolamo Lo Verso

This article describes Cosa Nostra bosses’ psychological characteristics starting from research data collected over almost twenty years (1994–2013). Through the use of fragments of interviews to justice collaborators and their wives, children, and sisters-in-law, we analyze the boss’ role and relational context. This article also reports the results of a recent research on the relationship between boss and white-collar workers, carried out through the analysis of environmental tapping recorded at a famous Sicilian Mafia boss’ house: Giuseppe Guttadauro. This research highlights the psychological diversity the relationship between boss and white-collar worker is based on. The analysis of environmental tapping transcriptions has also allowed discovery of the main relational modalities used by the boss and white-collar worker in their conversations.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2017

Promoting Awareness about Psychological Consequences of Living in a Community Oppressed by the Mafia: A Group-Analytic Intervention

Cecilia Giordano; Giusy Cannizzaro; Crispino Tosto; Laura Pavia; Maria Di Blasi

The effects of the Mafia have been extensively studied from sociological, economic, and historical points of view. However, little research has investigated the influence of the Mafia on individuals and communities in terms of its psychological and social impact. In order to contribute to the advancement of our understanding of the psychological effects of the Mafia on individuals and communities and to promote a participative process of social change, a group analytic intervention was conducted within a Community Based Participatory Research carried out in Corleone, a small Sicilian town with a historically recognized role in the evolution of the Mafia, as well as in the fight against its control. Qualitative findings from the group intervention revealed the development of an awareness process that allowed participants to become aware of their social unconscious anxieties and defenses and to recognize and manage the strong emotional impact related to the Mafias presence in their lives. Highlighting how psychological processes can have negative impacts on individual and collective capacity to pursuit transformation and resilience, this article provides important insight on how clinical psychology may operate in socio-cultural contexts to promote the reconstruction of the traumatic social dimensions in the community.


International Journal of Group Psychotherapy | 2015

Group Psychotherapy in Italy

Francesca Giannone; Cecilia Giordano; Maria Di Blasi

Abstract This article describes the history and the prevailing orientations of group psychotherapy in Italy (psychoanalytically oriented, psychodrama, CBT groups) and particularly group analysis. Provided free of charge by the Italian health system, group psychotherapy is growing, but its expansion is patchy. The main pathways of Italian training in the different group psychotherapy orientations are also presented. Clinical-theoretical elaboration on self development, psychopathology related to group experiences, and the methodological attention paid to objectives and methods in different clinical groups are issues related to group therapy in Italy. Difficulties in the relationship between research and clinical practice are discussed, as well as the empirical research network that tries to bridge the gap between research and clinical work in group psychotherapy. The economic crisis in Italy has led to massive cuts in health care and to an increasing demand for some forms of psychological treatment. For these reasons, and because of its positive cost-benefit ratio, group psychotherapy is now considered an important tool in the national health care system to expand the clinical response to different forms of psychological distress.


Frontiers in Psychiatry | 2017

Mediating Effects of Global Negative Effect Expectancies on the Association between Problematic Cannabis Use and Social Anxiety

Maria Di Blasi; Paola Cavani; Laura Pavia; Crispino Tosto; Sabina La Grutta; Rosa Lo Baido; Cecilia Giordano; Adriano Schimmenti

The relationship between social anxiety (SA) and cannabis use among adolescents and young adults is a highly debated topic. In this cross-sectional study, we tested whether cannabis use expectancies mediated the association between SA and cannabis use severity in a sample of 343 young adults (74.3% male) who used cannabis. They completed self-report measures for the screening of problematic cannabis use (Cannabis Use Problems Identification Test) and SA symptoms (Social Interaction Anxiety Scale and Social Phobia Scale). A multiple mediation analysis was used to test whether marijuana effect expectancies mediate SA effect on problematic cannabis use. SA was negatively associated with cannabis use severity in this sample, and we found evidence that cannabis use expectancies fully mediated this relationship. Specifically, global negative effect expectancies influence the relationship between SA and problematic cannabis use. These findings may inform current prevention strategies and clinical intervention for young adults who use cannabis.


RIVISTA DI PSICOLOGIA CLINICA | 2016

“Me lo offre un caffè?”: Una ricerca qualitativa sulla ‘collusione di strada’ a Palermo [“Would you offer me a coffee?”: A qualitative research on ‘street collusion’ in Palermo].

Girolamo Lo Verso; Cecilia Giordano; Noemi Venturella; Dominga Gullì; L Calabrese

Il presente lavoro si propone come studio-pilota sulla collusione in terre di mafia. I suoi oggetti di interesse sono Palermo e i “suoi” posteggiatori “abusivi”, figure oggi aggrovigliate al panorama geo-politico della citta di cui parlano le strade, gli accadimenti mediatici e la cronaca giudiziaria del capoluogo siciliano. Ci siamo in tal senso chiesti: chi sono questi soggetti sociali? E quali sono le motivazioni della loro presenza ipertrofica in una citta come Palermo? Grazie ai dati raccolti attraverso 21 “interviste da strada”, possiamo affermare che il problema e complesso e, come afferma Leoluca Orlando, riguarda posteggiatori e posteggianti, in uno stretto intreccio di collusioni consce e inconsce tra “domanda” e “offerta” di un servizio abusivo, illecito, irregolare che produce un fenomeno di illegalita nascosta alla luce del sole legato al “sentire mafioso”.


Journal of Counseling Psychology | 2016

Group relationships in early and late sessions and improvement in interpersonal problems

Cecilia Giordano; Gianluca Lo Coco; Carla Di Fratello; Dennis M. Kivlighan; Salvatore Gullo


Narrare i Gruppi | 2012

Identità e omofobia in Cosa Nostra: un contributo gruppoanalitico soggettuale

Cecilia Giordano; Marie Di Blasi

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E Coppola

University of Palermo

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