DEPRESSION HISTORY, DEPRESSION VULNERABILITY, AND THE EXPERIENCE OF EVERYDAY NEGATIVE EVENTS

被引:17
|
作者
O'Grady, Megan A.
Tennen, Howard [1 ]
Armeli, Stephen [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Connecticut, Ctr Hlth, Dept Community Med & Healthcare, Farmington, CT 06030 USA
[2] Fairleigh Dickinson Univ, Teaneck, NJ USA
关键词
RHEUMATOID-ARTHRITIS; MAJOR DEPRESSION; COGNITIVE VULNERABILITY; POSITIVE EMOTIONS; SCAR HYPOTHESIS; DAILY STRESS; DAILY-LIFE; PERSONALITY; DISORDER; MOOD;
D O I
10.1521/jscp.2010.29.9.949
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
This study examined whether deficits in dealing with daily problems emerge before a depressive episode (i e, pre-existing vulnerability) or after a depressive episode (i e, psychosocial scar) Participants completed a 30-day daily diary in which they reported their most negative event of the day, their appraisals of that event, and their mood Three years later, they completed a structured depression interview The sample consisted of 350 college students, 24 of whom had a past history of depression and 54 of whom experienced a depressive episode subsequent to diary completion Multilevel modeling revelled that students with past depression blamed others more thin the never-depressed and those with subsequent depression, which supported the scar hypothesis In support of the vulnerability hypothesis as compared to the never-depressed group, participants with past depression demonstrated steeper declines in positive mood on more stressful days but did not significantly differ from the subsequent-depression group Over all our findings do not provide clear support for either hypothesis, however, this study is the first to use a daily diary design to directly compare individuals with past depression to individuals who would subsequently experience depression
引用
收藏
页码:949 / 974
页数:26
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