3 research outputs found

    Prediction of adolescent happiness based on spiritual lifestyle with the mediation of mental health

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    Background and Aim: Happiness is one of the constructs proposed in positive psychology, which is related to many concepts in psychology. The aim of the present study was to predict the happiness of teenagers based on spiritual lifestyle with the mediation of mental health.  Methods:The research design was a correlational type in which happiness was the dependent variable, spirituality was the independent variable, and mental health was the mediating variable. The statistical population of students were studying in high schools in Tehran, and 300 people were selected by cluster sampling. The tools included Hall and Edwards' spirituality questionnaire (1996), Schneider's life expectancy questionnaire (2002) and revised Oxford happiness scale (2001). The data were analyzed by path analysis.  Results: The results show that spirituality and mental health are predictors of happiness and mental health has a relative mediating role in predicting happiness. Mental health is also predicted by spirituality. Conclusion: In the end, it was concluded that strategic hope completely mediates between the level of satisfaction and lack of negative feelings with spiritual lifestyle, and functional hope mediates partially between perception management and despair

    Potential application of spectral indices for olive water status assessment in (semi‐)arid regions: A case study in Khuzestan Province, Iran

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    Abstract Spectral indices can be used as fast and non‐destructive indicators of plant water status or stress. It is the objective of the present study to evaluate the feasibility of using several spectral indices including water index (WI) and normalized spectral water indices 1–5 (NWI 1–5) to estimate water status in olive trees in arid regions in Iran. The experimental treatments involved two olive cultivars (Koroneiki and T2) and four irrigation regimes (irrigated with 100%, 85%, 70%, and 55% estimated crop evapotranspiration [ETc]). The results obtained showed that olive trees subjected to the different irrigation regimes of 85%, 70%, and 55% ETc experienced soil water content (SWC) deficits by 4.5%, 12%, and 20.5% that of the control, respectively. Significant differences were observed among the treatments with respect to measured relative water content (RWC), SWC, and the spectral indices of WI and NWI 1–5. The normalized spectral indices combining NIR and NIR wavelengths were found more effective in tracking changes in RWC and SWC than those that combine NIR and VIS or VIS and VIS wavelengths, respectively. Spectral indices were closely and significantly associated with RWC (.63**<R2<.77**) and SWC (.51**<R2<.67**). Among all the spectral indices investigated, NWI‐2 showed the least consistent associations with RWC (ranging from 4–15% lower than the other indices examined) and SWC (ranging from 1–23% lower than the others). Based on the pooled data on spectral indices, RWC, and SWC collected during the study period, WI, NWI‐1, NWI‐4, and NWI‐5 showed stronger correlations with RWC and SWC than did NWI‐3 and NWI‐2. In conclusion, the spectral indices of WI and NWI 1–5 measured at the leaf level are found useful as fast and non‐destructive estimators of plant water stress in arid regions
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