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Depression and attributions in children and adolescents: A meta-analytic review
Authors:Tracy R. G. Gladstone  Nadine J. Kaslow
Affiliation:(1) Emory University Department of Psychology, 30322 Atlanta, Georgia, USA;(2) Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Pediatrics, and Psychology, Emory University School of Medicine, 30335 Atlanta, Georgia, USA;(3) Grady Health System, Emory University Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, 80 Butler Street S.E., 30335 Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Abstract:This article presents a meta-analytic review of the association between attributional styles and depressive symptoms in children and adolescents. In 28 studies involving 7500 subjects, the correlations were consistent with those predicted by the reformulated learned helplessness model of depression. For negative outcomes, attributions along the internal, stable, and global dimensions were associated positively with depression. Conversely, higher levels of depressive symptoms were related to more external, unstable, and specific attributions for positive events. Additionally, overall composite maladaptive attributional patterns for positive and negative events were correlated with higher levels of depressive symptoms in youth. Effect sizes for these associations ranged from moderate to large (Cohen, 1977). Findings from the significance tests of the combined results support the theory. A large number of unretrieved studies revealing null effects would be needed to invalidate these findings.
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