Emergence of attributional style and its relation to depressive symptoms. |
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Authors: | Cole, David A. Ciesla, Jeffrey A. Dallaire, Danielle H. Jacquez, Farrah M. Pineda, Ashley Q. LaGrange, Beth Truss, Alanna E. Folmer, Amy S. Tilghman-Osborne, Carlos Felton, Julia W. |
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Abstract: | The development of depressive attributional style (AS) and its role as a cognitive diathesis for depression were examined in children and adolescents (Grades 2-9). In a 4-wave longitudinal study of 3 overlapping age cohorts, AS, negative life events, and depressive symptoms were evaluated every 12 months. Consistency of children's attributions across situations was moderately high at all ages. The cross-sectional structure of AS changed with age, as stability became a more salient aspect of AS than internality and globality. The structure of AS also changed, becoming more traitlike as children grew older. In longitudinal analyses, evidence of a Cognitive Diathesis × Stress interaction did not emerge until Grades 8 and 9, suggesting that AS may not serve as a diathesis for depression at younger ages. Results suggest that attributional models of depression may require modification before they are applied across developmental levels. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | depression children adolescents longitudinal cognitive style attributional style negative life events depressive symptoms |
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