A Multilevel Investigation of Resiliency Scales for Children and Adolescents: The Relationships Between Self-Perceived Emotion Regulation, Vagally Mediated Heart Rate Variability, and Personal Factors Associated with Resilience
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Published version
Permanent lenke
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2628424Utgivelsesdato
2019Metadata
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Originalversjon
10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00438Sammendrag
Personal resiliency refers to individual attributes that are related to the process of
successfully adapting to the environment in the face of adverse conditions, also
known as resilience. Emotion regulation is increasingly found as a core component
in mental health and found to modulate individual differences in the management
of emotional responses. The Resiliency Scales for Children and Adolescents (RSCA;
Prince-Embury, 2006, 2007) were designed to systematically identify and quantify core
personal qualities of resiliency in youth, and includes Sense of Mastery scale (MAS),
Sense of Relatedness scale (REL), and Emotional Reactivity (REA) scale. The following
study was first conducted to confirm the Three-Factor model of Personal Resiliency in
a Norwegian student sample using factor analytic procedures. Secondly and the main
purpose of the study, was to investigate if personal resiliency is associated with selfreported measures related to emotion regulation, and with resting vagally mediated heart
rate variability (vmHRV) as a psychophysiological index of emotion regulation capacity.
A revised scale adapted to the Norwegian sample was developed. Results indicate
that protective indices related to personal resiliency are associated with both selfreported adaptive emotion regulation and outcome, and partly related to high capacity
for emotion regulation indicated by vmHRV. Risk related to personal vulnerability was
associated with maladaptive emotion regulation and outcome, but was not associated
with emotion regulation capacity. Together the findings provide supporting evidence
of both self-reported and psychophysiological correlates between emotion regulatory
processes and personal resiliency indicated by RSCA.