Firdiani, Norberta Fauko
Unknown Affiliation

Published : 2 Documents Claim Missing Document
Claim Missing Document
Check
Articles

Found 2 Documents
Search

Post-Traumatic Growth in Families with HIV/AIDS Firdiani, Norberta Fauko; Iqballa, Lisda; Harsono, Yudi Tri
Jurnal Psikologi Islam Vol. 8 No. 1 (2021): Jurnal Psikologi Islam
Publisher : Asosiasi Psikologi Islam (API) Himpsi

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.47399/jpi.v8i1.112

Abstract

HIV is one of chronic diseases which can cause the emergence of traumatic event towards its sufferers. The traumatic event which can be faced strongly will lead individuals to positive change which is called as growth after trauma. The purpose of this research is to know the growth description after trauma on individuals with PLWHA status. This research used descriptive-qualitative method and data collection was done through semi-structured interview technique. The results obtained from the research is that there is positive change on both subjects which indicates the existence of post traumatic growth with PLWHA status. That change covers the improvement in term of individual’s power, the correlation with other people, the rewards towards life, the identification of new possibility, and spiritual change.
The underlying mechanism behind quest for significance and its role in violence extremism: A systematic literature review Firdiani, Norberta Fauko; Milla, Mirra Noor; Hudiyana, Joevarian
Buletin Psikologi Vol 33, No 2 (2025)
Publisher : Faculty of Psychology Universitas Gadjah Mada

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.22146/buletinpsikologi.99985

Abstract

Based on the Quest for Significance Theory (SQT), violent extremism is a consequence of the quest for significance activated by significance loss, significance gain, and threat of significance loss. This systematic literature review aims to synthesize previous research related to the quest for significance using SQT. The authors selected 103 articles, and 24 articles met the inclusion criteria. The review results indicate that loss of significance consistently tends to activate the quest for significance and predicts violent extremism stemming from various factors, including vulnerable environments, perceptions of injustice, social rejection, and failure to achieve goals. Conversely, significance gain shows inconsistency; studies suggest this factor strengthens, weakens, or predicts future involvement in violent extremism. There has been no empirical research specifically addressing the threat of significance loss. The measurement of significance loss and significance gain has not been clearly distinguished and uses various proxies, indicating that standardized measurement tools have not yet been established. Additionally, there is still overlap in the operationalization of measurement between significance loss and the quest for significance.