The Relationship Between Belief in Supernatural Beings and Mental Health in College Students

Presenter Information

Levi RennerFollow

Presentation Type

Oral Presentation

Mentor/Supervising Professor Name

Williams, Ruth

Description

I will present the findings of my study which will explore the statistical relationship (if any exists) between belief in supernatural beings and mental health. The independent variables are belief in threatening supernatural beings, and belief in benevolent supernatural beings. The dependent variables are anxiety scores, depression scores, and life satisfaction scores. The hypotheses of my study are as follows: There will be a positive correlation between belief in threatening supernatural beings and high depression scores, high anxiety scores, and low life satisfaction scores. There will be a negative correlation between belief in benevolent supernatural beings and high depression scores, high anxiety scores and low life satisfaction scores.

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Apr 21st, 3:30 PM Apr 21st, 4:45 PM

The Relationship Between Belief in Supernatural Beings and Mental Health in College Students

I will present the findings of my study which will explore the statistical relationship (if any exists) between belief in supernatural beings and mental health. The independent variables are belief in threatening supernatural beings, and belief in benevolent supernatural beings. The dependent variables are anxiety scores, depression scores, and life satisfaction scores. The hypotheses of my study are as follows: There will be a positive correlation between belief in threatening supernatural beings and high depression scores, high anxiety scores, and low life satisfaction scores. There will be a negative correlation between belief in benevolent supernatural beings and high depression scores, high anxiety scores and low life satisfaction scores.