Title of article
Personality, interpersonal behavior, and depression: co-existence of stress-specific moderating and mediating effects
Author/Authors
Golan Shahar، نويسنده , , Thomas E. Joiner Jr.، نويسنده , , David C. Zuroff، نويسنده , , Sidney J. Blatt، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
14
From page
1583
To page
1596
Abstract
Moderating and mediating models of the depressogenic effect of personality (dependency and self-criticism), interpersonal behavior (excessive reassurance-seeking), and specific life stressors were examined. The moderating model posits that these factors augment each othersʹ depressogenic effects. The mediating model postulates that personality and interpersonal behavior generate life stress, resulting in depression. Support for both models was found in a two-wave longitudinal study of undergraduates (N=198). Family and friends-related stress moderated the effect of dependency, and a wide range of life events mediated the effect of self-criticism on depression. Reassurance-seeking behavior predicted only spouse-related stress. Results illuminate the need to assess specific, rather than general, life stress domains, and suggest that the vulnerability of dependency is reactive, whereas that of self-criticism is proactive.
Keywords
Dependency , Self-criticism , depression , Reassurance-seeking , Life stress , Moderators , mediators
Journal title
Personality and Individual Differences
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Personality and Individual Differences
Record number
457373
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