All Relations between Depression and positive emotion

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Dana Rabois, David A F Haag. The influence of cognitive coping and mood on smokers' self-efficacy and temptation. Addictive behaviors. vol 28. issue 3. 2003-06-04. PMID:12628627. this latter finding suggests that smokers with a history of depression may respond well to interventions aimed at increasing positive affect and augmenting positive cognitive coping skills. 2003-06-04 2023-08-12 Not clear
Barbara L Fredrickson, Michele M Tugade, Christian E Waugh, Gregory R Larki. What good are positive emotions in crises? A prospective study of resilience and emotions following the terrorist attacks on the United States on September 11th, 2001. Journal of personality and social psychology. vol 84. issue 2. 2003-05-14. PMID:12585810. findings suggest that positive emotions in the aftermath of crises buffer resilient people against depression and fuel thriving, consistent with the broaden-and-build theory. 2003-05-14 2023-08-12 Not clear
Robert E Roberts, William J Strawbridge, Stephane Deleger, George A Kapla. Are the fat more jolly? Annals of behavioral medicine : a publication of the Society of Behavioral Medicine. vol 24. issue 3. 2003-02-04. PMID:12173674. two waves of data from a panel study of community residents 50 years and older were used to investigate the association between obesity and eight indicators of mental health: happiness, perceived mental health, life satisfaction, positive affect, negative affect, optimism, feeling loved and cared for, and depression. 2003-02-04 2023-08-12 Not clear
David P Valentiner, Peter M Gutierrez, Dina Blacke. Anxiety measures and their relationship to adolescent suicidal ideation and behavior. Journal of anxiety disorders. vol 16. issue 1. 2003-01-31. PMID:12171211. for example, most of the anxiety scales appeared to lack divergent validity with regard to measures of depression and positive affect. 2003-01-31 2023-08-12 Not clear
V Makame, C Ani, S Grantham-McGrego. Psychological well-being of orphans in Dar El Salaam, Tanzania. Acta paediatrica (Oslo, Norway : 1992). vol 91. issue 4. 2002-11-22. PMID:12061364. the scale of internalizing problems comprised 21 items adapted from the rand mental health and beck depression inventories concerning mood, pessimism, somatic symptoms, sense of failure, anxiety, positive affect and emotional ties. 2002-11-22 2023-08-12 human
Bruce F Chorpit. The tripartite model and dimensions of anxiety and depression: an examination of structure in a large school sample. Journal of abnormal child psychology. vol 30. issue 2. 2002-10-29. PMID:12002397. for example, negative affect was positively related with all anxiety and depression scales, and positive affect was negatively correlated with the depression scale. 2002-10-29 2023-08-12 Not clear
J Laurent, R Ettelso. An examination of the tripartite model of anxiety and depression and its application to youth. Clinical child and family psychology review. vol 4. issue 3. 2002-02-22. PMID:11783739. in the tripartite model, anxiety is characterized by elevated levels of physiological hyperarousal (ph), depression is characterized by low levels of positive affect (pa), and negative affect (na) or generalized emotional distress is common to both. 2002-02-22 2023-08-12 Not clear
R C Shelton, A J Tomarke. Can recovery from depression be achieved? Psychiatric services (Washington, D.C.). vol 52. issue 11. 2001-12-14. PMID:11684742. the authors present a therapeutic heuristic that derives, in part, from a body of research that suggests that symptoms of mood disorders can be separated into three distinct components: somatic anxiety, which is most prominent in anxiety disorders, such as panic; anhedonia or low positive affect, which is most specific to depression; and general distress, which is present with both anxiety and depressive disorders. 2001-12-14 2023-08-12 Not clear
J L Wetherell, M Gatz, N L Pederse. A longitudinal analysis of anxiety and depressive symptoms. Psychology and aging. vol 16. issue 2. 2001-10-25. PMID:11405307. these findings provide additional support for the idea that anxiety symptoms may reflect a personality trait such as neuroticism more than do depressive symptoms and suggest that low positive affect may not be as specific to depression among older adults as in younger people. 2001-10-25 2023-08-12 human
B J Cox, M W Enns, J R Walker, K Kjernisted, S R Pidlubn. Psychological vulnerabilities in patients with major depression vs panic disorder. Behaviour research and therapy. vol 39. issue 5. 2001-05-31. PMID:11341253. journal of abnormal psychology, 100, 316-336) posits that anxiety and depression share nonspecific features of neuroticism but that somatic arousal appears unique to anxiety, and low positive affect appears unique to depression. 2001-05-31 2023-08-12 human
M J Schroevers, R Sanderman, E van Sonderen, A V Rancho. The evaluation of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression (CES-D) scale: Depressed and Positive Affect in cancer patients and healthy reference subjects. Quality of life research : an international journal of quality of life aspects of treatment, care and rehabilitation. vol 9. issue 9. 2001-05-24. PMID:11332223. the evaluation of the center for epidemiologic studies depression (ces-d) scale: depressed and positive affect in cancer patients and healthy reference subjects. 2001-05-24 2023-08-12 human
J H Barlow, A P Turner, C C Wrigh. A randomized controlled study of the Arthritis Self-Management Programme in the UK. Health education research. vol 15. issue 6. 2001-01-18. PMID:11142075. main outcome measures included: arthritis self-efficacy, health behaviours (exercise, cognitive symptom management, diet and relaxation) and health status (pain, fatigue, anxiety, depression and positive affect). 2001-01-18 2023-08-12 human
T E Joiner, C J Loniga. Tripartite model of depression and anxiety in youth psychiatric inpatients: relations with diagnostic status and future symptoms. Journal of clinical child psychology. vol 29. issue 3. 2000-12-28. PMID:10969421. the tripartite model suggests that anhedonia (low positive affect, or pa) differentiates depression from other conditions, whereas generalized negative affect (na) also characterizes depression but is not specific to it. 2000-12-28 2023-08-12 Not clear
K A Cagney, A W Wu, N E Fink, M W Jenckes, K B Meyer, E B Bass, N R Pow. Formal literature review of quality-of-life instruments used in end-stage renal disease. American journal of kidney diseases : the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation. vol 36. issue 2. 2000-08-28. PMID:10922311. the most frequently assessed domains were depression (41%), social functioning (32%), positive affect (30%), and role functioning (27%). 2000-08-28 2023-08-12 Not clear
E Keogh, J Reid. Exploring the factor structure of the Mood and Anxiety Symptom Questionnaire (MASQ). Journal of personality assessment. vol 74. issue 1. 2000-06-16. PMID:10779936. l. a. clark and watson (1991) proposed a tripartite model of anxiety and depression defined in terms of common symptoms relating to general distress, anxiety-specific symptoms of hyperarousal, and depression-specific symptoms of low positive affect and loss of interest. 2000-06-16 2023-08-12 Not clear
O Luminet, R M Bagby, H Wagner, G J Taylor, J D Parke. Relation between alexithymia and the five-factor model of personality: a facet-level analysis. Journal of personality assessment. vol 73. issue 3. 2000-03-21. PMID:10689648. analysis of the lower order traits (i.e., facets) of the ffm revealed that depression for n; positive emotions and assertiveness for e; feelings and actions for o; altruism, tender-mindedness, and modesty for a; and competence for c predicted alexithymia. 2000-03-21 2023-08-12 Not clear
M P Lawton, L Winter, M H Kleban, K Ruckdesche. Affect and quality of life: objective and subjective. Journal of aging and health. vol 11. issue 2. 1999-11-09. PMID:10558435. specifically, the dual-channel hypothesis predicted that objective and subjective social engagement would enhance positive affect (pa) but be unrelated to depression. 1999-11-09 2023-08-12 Not clear
C J Lonigan, E S Hooe, C F David, J A Kistne. Positive and negative affectivity in children: confirmatory factor analysis of a two-factor model and its relation to symptoms of anxiety and depression. Journal of consulting and clinical psychology. vol 67. issue 3. 1999-07-19. PMID:10369058. the positive affect (pa) and negative affect (na) framework that is embodied in the tripartite model of anxiety and depression has proved useful with adult populations; however, there is as yet little investigation with children concerning either the measurement of pa and na or the relation between pa and na and levels of adjustment. 1999-07-19 2023-08-12 Not clear
J Lerner, S A Safren, A Henin, M Warman, R G Heimberg, P C Kendal. Differentiating anxious and depressive self-statements in youth: factor structure of the Negative Affect Self-Statement Questionnaire among youth referred to an anxiety disorders clinic. Journal of clinical child psychology. vol 28. issue 1. 1999-05-20. PMID:10070609. this analysis yielded 4 factors (depressive self-statements, anxiety/somatic self-statements, negative affect self-statements, and positive affect self-statements) broadly consistent with both the content-specificity hypothesis (beck & clark, 1988) and l. a. clark and watson's (1991b) tripartite model of anxiety and depression. 1999-05-20 2023-08-12 Not clear
W W Hal. Judgment of facial expressions and depression persistence. Psychiatry research. vol 80. issue 3. 1999-02-25. PMID:9796942. it was found that the judgment of negative emotions in the facial expressions was related to both the depression severity at t1 and depression persistence (t2 and t3), whereas the judgment of positive emotions was not related to the patients' depression. 1999-02-25 2023-08-12 human