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Linking Peer Victimization to the Development of Depressive Self-Schemas in Children and Adolescents
Authors:David A. Cole  Tammy L. Dukewich  Kathryn Roeder  Keneisha R. Sinclair  Jessica McMillan  Elizabeth Will  Sarah A. Bilsky  Nina C. Martin  Julia W. Felton
Affiliation:1. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, 37203-5721, USA
2. Department of Psychology and Human Development, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, 37203-5721, USA
3. Department of Counseling and Psychology, Tennessee Technological University, Cookeville, TN, 38505, USA
4. Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, 20742, USA
Abstract:Previous theory and research suggest that childhood experiences are more likely to generate depressive self-schemas when they focus attention on negative information about oneself, generate strong negative affect, and are repetitive or chronic. Persistent peer victimization meets these criteria. In the current study, 214 youths (112 females) with empirically-validated histories of high or low peer victimization completed self-report measures of negative and positive self-cognitions as well as incidental recall and recognition tests following a self-referent encoding task. Results supported the hypothesis that depressive self-schemas are associated with peer victimization. Specifically, peer victimization was associated with stronger negative self-cognitions, weaker positive self-cognitions, and an elimination of the normative memorial bias for recall of positive self-referential words. Effects were stronger for relational and verbal victimization compared to physical victimization. Support accrues to a model about the social-developmental origins of cognitive diatheses for depression.
Keywords:
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