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Ruminative subtypes and coping responses: Active and passive pathways to depressive symptoms
Authors:Brett M Marroquín  Monique Fontes  Alex Scilletta  Regina Miranda
Institution:1. Hunter College of the City University of New York;2. Yale University , New Haven, Connecticut, USA brett.marroquin@yale.edu;4. Hunter College of the City University of New York , New York, USA
Abstract:Individuals draw on a variety of cognitive strategies—some active, some passive—as a way of coping with stress and dysphoria. Previous research suggests that the impact of rumination—one such strategy—on depression depends on whether rumination takes the passive form of brooding versus the more active form of reflection. This study tests whether brooding and reflection explain the effects of passive versus active coping responses, respectively, on depressive symptoms. In an undergraduate sample (n=284), brooding partially mediated the relationship between passive coping and depressive symptoms, whereas reflection did not. Reflection moderated the relationship between active coping and symptoms, such that low active copers who were high in reflection endorsed more symptoms than those low in reflection. Brooding and reflection may operate within cognitive–behavioural response pathways characterised by an active/passive distinction. Whether reflection is maladaptive likely depends on the active nature of the surrounding coping response.
Keywords:Rumination  Brooding  Reflection  Depression  Coping
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