Mei-Chuan Wang
Fayetteville State University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mei-Chuan Wang.
Eating Behaviors | 2008
Eric Cooley; Tamina Toray; Mei-Chuan Wang; Noreen N. Valdez
Effects of maternal eating behaviors and attitudes, maternal feedback to daughter about weight issues, mother-daughter relationship closeness, media influences, and mothers perceptions of daughters shape on daughters body image and eating pathology were examined using 91 pairs of mothers and college-aged daughters. Hierarchical multiple regressions using daughters BMI as the first step were separately performed for daughters body image and eating pathology. Variables predictive of daughters body image included negative feedback from mother, mothers disapproval of daughters figure, and mothers eating behaviors and attitudes as perceived by daughters. A similar pattern was found for daughters eating pathology scores with the addition of mothers tendency to internalize media messages regarding thinness and beauty significantly adding to the prediction. Maternal influence through modeling may be best assessed by using the daughters perceptions of their mothers because this corresponds to what the daughter was aware of in their mothers eating attitudes and behaviors. Negative feedback from mothers about daughters figures and eating patterns significantly increased daughters difficulties in these areas. Mothers who showed a greater internalization of media messages about thinness were most likely to have daughters with eating pathologies.
The Journal of Positive Psychology | 2007
Mei-Chuan Wang; Owen Richard Lightsey; Todd Pietruszka; Ayse Ciftci Uruk; Anita G. Wells
Positive psychological factors that help protect vulnerable persons from suicidal behavior are vital in understanding resiliency and suicide prevention. The purpose of the current study was to examine whether positive factors (including purpose in life, reasons for living, and coping styles) mediate the relationship between stressful life events and suicidal behaviors among 416 college student volunteers. Reasons for living inversely predicted suicidal behavior and thoughts directly as well as indirectly via an inverse relationship with depression. Purpose in life indirectly predicted suicidal behavior and thoughts via an inverse effect on depression, whereas emotion-focused coping indirectly predicted suicidal behavior and thoughts both through an effect on depression and an inverse effect on reasons for living. In addition, avoidant coping indirectly predicted suicidal behavior via a direct, positive effect on reasons for living. Reasons for living and emotion-oriented coping had the largest effects in the model. Results of this study underscore the importance of augmenting reasons for living and purpose in life among suicidal or potentially suicidal persons.
Death Studies | 2013
Mei-Chuan Wang; Owen Richard Lightsey; Kimberly K. Tran; Taria S. Bonaparte
The purpose of this study was to contribute to the nascent literature on resilience and suicidality among Black Americans by examining factors that may predict less suicidal behavior among this population. The authors hypothesized that reasons for living, life satisfaction, and religious awareness would account for unique variance in suicidal thoughts and behavior among Black Americans, above the variance accounted for by depressive symptoms. They also hypothesized that reasons for living and religious awareness would be stronger inverse predictors among Black women than Black men. Results indicated that both depression and life satisfaction were stronger predictors of suicidal behavior among Black men. Among women, only reasons for living was a significant inverse predictor of suicidal thoughts and behavior. More frequent reasons for living moderated the relationship between depression and suicidal thoughts and behavior among Black women.
Archives of Suicide Research | 2013
Mei-Chuan Wang; Y. Joel Wong; Kimberly K. Tran; Pius N. Nyutu; Angela Spears
This study utilized an ecological framework to explore the role of 4 culturally relevant protective factors—reasons for living, Afrocentric worldview, family support, and friend support—in protecting Black American college students from suicidal behavior. Participants were 289 Black American college students. We hypothesized that these 4 culturally relevant factors would exert indirect protective effects on suicidal behavior through their association with reduced depressive symptoms. Results indicated that reasons for living, perceived supportive behaviors from family, and Afrocentric worldview exerted indirect protective effects on suicidal behaviors through their negative associations with depressive symptoms. The mediation effect from friend support to depression and suicidal behavior was not significant.
Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment & Trauma | 2008
Mei-Chuan Wang; Sharon G. Horne; Robert Holdford; Kris Henning
ABSTRACT The aim of this study was to determine the role of family of origin violence in predicting intimate partner violence (IPV). Male participants were divided into generally offending and family-only groups according to whether their violence occurred exclusively within intimate partner and family contexts or toward others outside the family as well. Results showed that exposure to family of origin violence affected IPV differently between the two groups of offenders. For generally offending offenders, exposure to family of origin violence significantly predicted IPV above and beyond demographic factors, alcohol and drug use, and bidirectional aggression. For family-only offenders, witnessing father-initiated violence toward the mother had a significant influence on their violent behavior toward their intimate partners. Clinical implications of these findings are addressed.
Journal of Constructivist Psychology | 2009
Heidi M. Levitt; Daniel C. Williams; Ayse Ciftci Uruk; Divya Kannan; Maki Obana; Brandy L. Smith; Mei-Chuan Wang; Laura W. Plexico; Jonathan W. Camp; Heather Hardison; Anasa Watts; Wendy J. Biss
This article presents a grounded theory analysis of the experience of sustaining an abiding curiosity. Results emphasize how curiosity became inherently motivating and pleasurable, and led to deeper understandings of interpersonal differences and an enriched sense of identity. Despite the experience of curiosity strengthening, waning, and shifting across time, it was experienced as a longstanding driving force. At the same time, if consuming, curiosity holds risks for participants and could lead to alienation from others and despair. The discussion puts forward a more integrated understanding of a somewhat fragmented literature and highlights the complexities that depth curiosity entails.
The Counseling Psychologist | 2009
Owen Richard Lightsey; Anita G. Wells; Mei-Chuan Wang; Todd Pietruszka; Ayse Çiftçi; Brett Stancil
The authors tested whether coping styles and fear of pain mediate the relationship between positive affect and negative affect on one hand and pain-related distress (PD) on the other. Among African American and Caucasian female college students, negative affect, fear of pan, and emotion-oriented coping together accounted for 34% of the variance in PD among African American woman and 40% of the variance in PD among Caucasion women. Emotion-oriented coping and fear of pain fully mediated the relationship between negative affect and PD among Caucasian women and partly mediated the relationship between negative affect and PD among African American women. Results suggest that reducing college womens reliance on emotion-oriented coping and their fears of pain may help reduce PD.
Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2005
Augustine Osman; Francisco X. Barrios; Peter M. Gutierrez; Braden Schwarting; Beverly A. Kopper; Mei-Chuan Wang
We conducted three studies to evaluate further the reliability and construct validity of a new self-report instrument, the Pain Distress Inventory (PDI; Osman et al., 2003, The Pain Distress Inventory: Development and initial psychometric properties, J. Clin. Psychol. 59: 767–785). In Study I, exploratory and confirmatory factor analytic results confirmed the replicability of the four-factor oblique solution of the PDI in a mixed sample of students and nonstudents. We also found strong evidence for criterion-related validity of scores on this instrument. In Study II, multisample analyses results found further evidence for equivalence of structure of the PDI across African American and Caucasian young adults. Ethnic and gender group differences were obtained on two of the PDI scale scores. Internal consistency reliability estimates on the PDI total and scale scores were good in both Studies I and II. In Study III, additional analyses of internal consistency and known-groups validity established strong support for construct validity of the PDI.
International Journal for the Psychology of Religion | 2016
Mei-Chuan Wang; Y. Joel Wong; Pius N. Nyutu; Angela Spears; Wilbert Nichols
ABSTRACT The purpose of this study was to identify the protective roles of religious faith and family support in buffering against suicidal behavior in a sample of substance abuse outpatients seeking treatment. Data were collected from 112 clinical outpatients seeking treatment for substance abuse. We hypothesized that religious faith would be related to lower levels of suicidal behavior through a negative association with depressive symptoms. We expected this mediation effect would differ across varying levels of family support, providing support for a moderated mediation effect. The results indicate that religious faith exerts stronger direct and indirect effects on suicidal behavior at low levels of family support. Religious faith was significantly and negatively related to suicidal behavior only at low levels of family support. The findings suggest that in the absence of family support, religious faith may play a compensatory role in protecting against suicidal behavior.
Death Studies | 2015
Kimberly K. Tran; Y. Joel Wong; Kevin Cokley; Chris Brownson; David J. Drum; Germine H. Awad; Mei-Chuan Wang
This study addresses the paucity of knowledge on protective factors associated with Asian American college students’ suicidal behavior. Participants were 58 Asian American college students who seriously considered suicide within the past 12 months and responded to open-ended online survey questions about what was helpful during their suicide crisis. A phenomenological analysis of participants’ narratives revealed the following protective factors: (a) a desire not to hurt or burden others, (b) social support, (c) fear, (d) self-reliance, and (e) insight. These findings can guide culturally informed clinical interventions by mental health professionals.