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Inventaire d'Engagement Religieux-10 (IER-10)×Échelle de l'Expérience Spirituelle Quotidienne (DSES)×
DomainePsychologie de la religionPsychologie de la religion
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine20032002
Auteur d'origineEverett L. Worthington Jr., Nathaniel G. Wade, Tamara L. Hight, Jennifer S. Ripley, Michael E. McCullough, & othersLynn G. Underwood & Jeanne A. Teresi
TypeSelf-reportSelf-report
Source fondatriceWorthington, E. L., Jr., Wade, N. G., Hight, T. L., Ripley, J. S., McCullough, M. E., Berry, J. W., ... Schmitt, M. M. (2003). The Religious Commitment Inventory-10: Development, refinement, and validation of a brief scale for research and counseling. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 50(1), 84–96. DOI ↗Underwood, L. G., & Teresi, J. A. (2002). The Daily Spiritual Experience Scale: Development, theoretical description, reliability, exploratory factor analysis, and preliminary construct validity using health-related data. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 24(1), 22–33. DOI ↗
AliasRCI-10, Religious CommitmentDSES
Apparentées44
RésuméThe Religious Commitment Inventory-10 (RCI-10), developed by Worthington and colleagues in 2003, is a brief 10-item self-report measure of religious commitment: the degree to which an individual dedicates themselves to religious beliefs, practices, and community. The RCI-10 distinguishes between two dimensions of commitment: Intrapersonal (personal faith conviction, spiritual discipline, religious significance) and Interpersonal (engagement with faith community, public religious identity, shared practices). It has become widely used in counseling psychology, pastoral care, and research on religiosity and well-being to assess the strength and breadth of religious dedication.The DSES, developed by Underwood and Teresi in 2002, is a 16-item self-report measure designed to capture the frequency and depth of spiritual experiences that occur in everyday life. Unlike scales that measure religious affiliation or institutional participation, the DSES assesses whether and how often individuals report direct, lived spiritual experience—moments of connection to something transcendent, sacred, or divine. It has become widely used in health services research, chaplaincy, and gerontological studies to quantify spiritual well-being and predict psychological and health outcomes.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: RCI-10 · DSES. Consulté le 2026-06-19 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare