Frontiers in Psychiatry (Nov 2021)

Psychological Network Analysis of General Self-Efficacy in High vs. Low Resilient Functioning Healthy Adults

  • Katja Schueler,
  • Katja Schueler,
  • Jessica Fritz,
  • Lena Dorfschmidt,
  • Anne-Laura van Harmelen,
  • Eike Stroemer,
  • Michèle Wessa,
  • Michèle Wessa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2021.736147
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Resilience to stress has gained increasing interest by researchers from the field of mental health and illness and some recent studies have investigated resilience from a network perspective. General self-efficacy constitutes an important resilience factor. High levels of self-efficacy have shown to promote resilience by serving as a stress buffer. However, little is known about the role of network connectivity of self-efficacy in the context of stress resilience. The present study aims at filling this gap by using psychological network analysis to study self-efficacy and resilience. Based on individual resilient functioning scores, we divided a sample of 875 mentally healthy adults into a high and low resilient functioning group. To compute these scores, we applied a novel approach based on Partial Least Squares Regression on self-reported stress and mental health measures. Separately for both groups, we then estimated regularized partial correlation networks of a ten-item self-efficacy questionnaire. We compared three different global connectivity measures–strength, expected influence, and shortest path length–as well as absolute levels of self-efficacy between the groups. Our results supported our hypothesis that stronger network connectivity of self-efficacy would be present in the highly resilient functioning group compared to the low resilient functioning group. In addition, the former showed higher absolute levels of general self-efficacy. Future research could consider using partial least squares regression to quantify resilient functioning to stress and to study the association between network connectivity and resilient functioning in other resilience factors.

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