Co-ruminating, or excessively discussing problems, with friends is proposed to have adjustment trade-offs. Co-rumination is hypothesized to contribute both to positive friendship adjustment and to prob-lematic emotional adjustment. Previous single-assessment research was consistent with this hypothesis, but whether co-rumination is an antecedent of adjustment changes was unknown. A 6-month longitudinal study with middle childhood to midadolescent youths examined whether co-rumination is simultaneously a risk factor (for depression and anxiety) and a protective factor (for friendship problems). For girls, a reciprocal relationship was found in which co-rumination predicted increased depressive and anxiety symptoms and increased positive frie...
Co-rumination involves excessively discussing personal problems with peers. This study examined corr...
Co-rumination has consistently been shown to be maladaptive in the context of emotional well-being. ...
Depressive symptoms and positive friendship quality are typically inversely correlated across numero...
Co-ruminating, or excessively discussing problems, with friends is proposed to have adjustment trade...
Co-rumination is the extensive discussion and speculation about problems that occurs in dyadic relat...
Depressive symptoms dramatically increase in the transition from childhood to adolescence (Hankin et...
Co-rumination is the act of negatively discussing problems with another person. The focus of co-rumi...
Co-rumination, defined as repetitive, problem-focused talk, explains higher levels of friendship qua...
Co-rumination involves friends spending a great deal of time encouraging each other to excessively d...
A Thesis Submitted In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of Master of Science-Ps...
This study tested 2 related hypotheses. The first holds that high co-rumination anticipates heighten...
Co-rumination is talking excessively about problems with another person such as a same-sex best frie...
Objectives We examined whether co-rumination with online friends buffered the link between social an...
Rose (2002) first defined co-rumination as extensive problem-focused talk, and it has been found to ...
Co-rumination refers to the process of engaging in repeated discussion of personal problems in dyadi...
Co-rumination involves excessively discussing personal problems with peers. This study examined corr...
Co-rumination has consistently been shown to be maladaptive in the context of emotional well-being. ...
Depressive symptoms and positive friendship quality are typically inversely correlated across numero...
Co-ruminating, or excessively discussing problems, with friends is proposed to have adjustment trade...
Co-rumination is the extensive discussion and speculation about problems that occurs in dyadic relat...
Depressive symptoms dramatically increase in the transition from childhood to adolescence (Hankin et...
Co-rumination is the act of negatively discussing problems with another person. The focus of co-rumi...
Co-rumination, defined as repetitive, problem-focused talk, explains higher levels of friendship qua...
Co-rumination involves friends spending a great deal of time encouraging each other to excessively d...
A Thesis Submitted In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of Master of Science-Ps...
This study tested 2 related hypotheses. The first holds that high co-rumination anticipates heighten...
Co-rumination is talking excessively about problems with another person such as a same-sex best frie...
Objectives We examined whether co-rumination with online friends buffered the link between social an...
Rose (2002) first defined co-rumination as extensive problem-focused talk, and it has been found to ...
Co-rumination refers to the process of engaging in repeated discussion of personal problems in dyadi...
Co-rumination involves excessively discussing personal problems with peers. This study examined corr...
Co-rumination has consistently been shown to be maladaptive in the context of emotional well-being. ...
Depressive symptoms and positive friendship quality are typically inversely correlated across numero...