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Depressive self-schemas in clinic and nonclinic children

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Abstract

Depressed, clinic-referred children were compared to nondepressed, clinic-referred children and to nondepressed, nonclinic children (ages 8–12) on three cognitive measures of positive and negative self-schemas. On word recognition measures, depressed subjects evinced a less positive self-schema, compared to the two nondepressed groups; however, all three groups recognized significantly more positive than negative self-referential words. On incidental word recall measures, depressed children again evinced less of a positive self-schema than did the nondepressed groups. Furthermore, only the nondepressed groups recalled significantly more positive than negative words. On reaction time measures, no differences emerged between the three groups. Results supported the relation of problematic cognitive self-schemas to depression in children, and suggested that such schemas affect both storage and accessibility of new information. Implications for future research are discussed.

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We are grateful to Kay Hodges, Ph.D., for her consultation of data collection and to Scott E. Maxwell, Ph.D., for his consultative assistance in data reduction and statistical analysis. We also thank Rick Ingram, Ph.D., and Mark McDaniel, Ph.D., for their recommendations during the conceptualization of this study.

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Prieto, S.L., Cole, D.A. & Tageson, C.W. Depressive self-schemas in clinic and nonclinic children. Cogn Ther Res 16, 521–534 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01175139

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