Language use of depressed and depression-vulnerable college students
The University of Texas at Austin
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Abstract
Essays written by currently-depressed, formerly-depressed, and never-depressed college students were examined for differences in language that might shed light on the cognitive operations associated with depression and depression-vulnerability. A text analysis program computed the incidence of words in predesignated categories. Consistent with Beck's cognitive model and with Pyczsinski and Greenberg's self-focus model of depression, depressed participants used more negatively valenced words and used the word, "I" more than did never-depressed participants. Formerly-depressed (presumably depression-vulnerable) participants did not differ from never-depressed participants on these indices of depressive…
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3Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Psychology
- Depression (economics)
- Cognition
- Clinical psychology
- Cognitive vulnerability
- Vulnerability (computing)
- Beck Depression Inventory
- Developmental psychology
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