Curriculum Vitaes
Profile Information
- Affiliation
- Aichi University /Showa Counseling Room for Children
- Degree
- Ph.D.(Pedagogy)(Kyoto University)(Kyoto University)
- J-GLOBAL ID
- 202601014131366877
- researchmap Member ID
- R000101775
Research Areas
1Research History
5-
Apr, 2026 - Present
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Apr, 2021 - Present
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Apr, 2022 - Mar, 2026
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Apr, 2019 - Mar, 2021
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Apr, 2012 - Mar, 2019
Education
3Committee Memberships
2-
Apr, 2025 - Present
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Sep, 2020 - Mar, 2025
Awards
1-
Feb, 2024
Papers
25-
The Japanese Journal of Personality, 33(1) 46-60, 2024 Peer-reviewedLead author
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Journal of Japanese clinical psychology, 40(1) 28-39, Apr, 2022 Peer-reviewedLead author
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The Japanese Journal of Personality, 29(3) 159-161, Jan, 2021 Peer-reviewedLead authorThe purpose of this study was to develop a scale to measure the self-image instability of early adolescents. The subjects were 937 students (272 fifth and sixth graders and 665 junior high school students) who responded to a self-report questionnaire twice, one month apart. Factor analysis revealed that the self-image instability scale includes three subscales: positive changes, negative changes, and neutral instabilities. The scale demonstrated good correlations with test–retest and existing scales. Negative self-image changes and neutral instabilities had positive correlation with stress responses, while positive changes had small negative correlations with stress responses.
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The Japanese Journal of Personality, 29(2) 50-60, Aug 4, 2020 Peer-reviewedLead authorAlthough previous research indicates that victimization and self-image instability relate to bullying, the causal relationships between these variables are unclear. The primary purpose of this study was to examine how self-image instability and victimization relate to bullying. Participants were 1,362 children (420 elementary school children and 942 junior high school children), who answered a self-report questionnaire three times in one year. The questionnaire measured self-image instability, bullying, and victimization. In the first questionnaire, participants were asked to report the degree of experienced bullying and victimization from April until the present. The second and third questionnaires recorded bullying and victimization between the previous self-report and the present. Longitudinal data analyses using a cross-lagged model indicated self-image instability predicted victimization, and victimization marginally predicted bullying for only junior high school children.