Faculty of International Social Sciences

HIROTO IKEDA

  (池田 寛人)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Student Counseling Room, Gakushuin University
Degree
Ph.D. (Human Sciences)(Mar, 2021, Waseda University)

J-GLOBAL ID
202301017011844098
researchmap Member ID
R000050928

Papers

 6
  • Kaneko Yasunori, Ikeda Hiroto, Fujishima Yuma, Umeda Ayumi, Oguchi Mana, Takahashi Eriko
    The Japanese Journal of Personality, 31(1) 1-11, Apr 27, 2022  Peer-reviewed
    The purpose of this study was to develop a Japanese version of the Pure Procrastination Scale (PPS-J), and examine its reliability and validity. The original version of the scale was developed to measure procrastination, a phenomenon that involves a voluntary delay of an intended course of action despite expecting to be worse off for doing so. In this study, a confirmatory factor analysis was conducted on 195 university students. The scale has a 12-item, three-factor structure consisting of “implemental procrastination,” “decisional procrastination,” and “untimeliness.” It was confirmed that it had sufficient internal consistency and construct validity. It was also shown to have acceptable retest reliability in a study of 57 university students. A daily life survey of 44 university students showed the substantial construct validity of the PPS-J. Overall, the results suggest that the PPS-J is a valid scale for measuring procrastination.
  • Fujishima Yuma, Umeda Ayumi, Ikeda Hiroto, Takahashi Eriko, Tomita Nozomi, Kumano Hiroaki
    Japanese Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 26(1) 16-23, 2021  Peer-reviewed
  • IKEDA Hiroto, UMEDA Ayumi, FUJISHIMA Yuma, TAKAHASHI Eriko, MATSUNO Kodai, KUMANO Hiroaki
    Japanese Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 25(2) 207-215, 2020  Peer-reviewedLead author
  • FUJISHIMA Yuma, IKEDA Hiroto, UMEDA Ayumi, TAKAHASHI Eriko, TOMITA Nozomi, KUMANO Hiroaki
    Japanese Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 25(2) 227-235, 2020  Peer-reviewed
  • Umeda Ayumi, Takahashi Eriko, Ikeda Hiroto, Nedate Kaneo
    Japanese Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 25 14-22, 2020  Peer-reviewed
    The current study examined the relationships among mindfulness, attention control, mind wandering, and emotion. In Study 1, 149 undergraduate and graduate students were surveyed. Results suggested that attention control reduced negative emotions through a decrease in mind wandering and that acceptance of mindfulness directly reduced negative emotions. Previous studies have indicated that mindfulness training (MT) and the attention training technique (ATT) enhance attention control. Study 2 compared MT and the ATT to examine their effects on mind wandering and negative emotions. The participants were 37 undergraduate and graduate students who were randomly assigned to an MT group (n=13), an ATT group (n=13), and a control group (n=11). The experiment included a pre-test and post-test over a period of two weeks, and mind wandering was measured using the Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART). The MT and ATT groups were asked to undergo daily training for two weeks, and the control group was asked to engage in routine activities. Results indicated that the MT and ATT groups were able to control mind wandering and that attention control and the acceptance of mindfulness were effective in decreasing mind wandering.

Misc.

 20

Teaching Experience

 3