The Open Family Studies Journal

2009, 2 : 15-22
Published online 2009 February 25. DOI: 10.2174/1874922400902010015
Publisher ID: TOFAMSJ-2-15

The Resilience Scale: A Duplication Study in Japan

Chieko Hasui1 , Hiromi Igarashi , Noriko Shikai , Masahiro Shono , Toshiaki Nagata and Toshinori Kitamura
Kumamoto University Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Japan.

ABSTRACT

To examine the factor structure, construct, and predictive validity of the Resilience Scale (RS), Japanese university students (N = 504 to 547) were examined. The RS has a good internal consistency and a single factor structure. Students high in resilience were less likely to be depressed or suicidal; more likely to adopt task-oriented coping but less likely to adopt emotion-oriented coping; more likely to have secure attachment with an opposite-sex partner; less likely to have shame feeling but more likely to have pride feeling; more likely to show healthy narcissistic personality traits but less likely to show identity diffusion; more likely to report their parents as high in care and low in overprotection; and more likely to report receiving punishment as a child. The RS is shown to be a significant predictor of the depressive severity two weeks later after controlling for demographic variables, baseline depression, and negative life events, which occurred during the previous week. Thus, the RS is a valid measure in a Japanese student population.