Negative cognitive style interacts with negative life events to predict first onset of a major depressive episode in adolescence via hopelessness.
Abstract
The hopelessness theory of depression is a prominent account of depression that posits that individuals with a negative inferential style are more likely to become hopeless when they experience negative life events (NLEs) and that hopelessness is a proximal cause of depression. There is strong evidence supporting the role of a negative inferential style in the pathogenesis of major depression; however, substantially less is known about the...
Paper Details
Title
Negative cognitive style interacts with negative life events to predict first onset of a major depressive episode in adolescence via hopelessness.
Published Date
Jan 1, 2018
Volume
127
Issue
1
Pages
1 - 11
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