We examined 70 abnormal psychology textbooks published from 1920s to the present to identify consistent cross-cultural themes with regard to human depressive experiences over time and across regions of the world. The cultural and cross-cultural literature on abnormality and depression, in particular, has contributed to widening the scope of abnormal psychology textbooks over time. However, the texts are almost entirely dependent on Western diagnostic categories, particularly with regard to definitions of depression. Within the Western classification framework, authors of abnormal psychology textbooks have increasingly recognized the role of culture in depressive experiences and their communication. On the basis of our content analysis of th...
The diagnosis and treatment of depressive and anxiety disorders has changed rapidly in the past cent...
This thesis reviews the cultural history of western depressive symptoms and critically examines the ...
The expectation that Chinese individuals tend to present distress in a somatic way, through physical...
Described since the beginning of medicine and considered to be the oldest mental illness, depression...
This paper describes the developing area of cultural psychopathology, an interdisciplinary field of ...
examine key questions that arise from a cross-cultural approach to the study of depression / begins ...
Depression is a highly prevalent mental illness with increasing burden for the patients, their famil...
Decades of cross-cultural research have documented a distinctive form of psychopathology among depre...
With a starting point in John Abela’s groundbreaking developmental psychopathology research on adole...
This thesis is an investigation into cultural variations in experiences of depression. With the aid ...
Though rates of depression are comparable across cultures, similar rates may obscure the diversity o...
Though rates of depression are comparable across cultures, similar rates may obscure the diversity o...
We believe that the application of a culture–mind– brain perspective to Chinese somatization opens u...
Depression has been examined from a Western, Asian American and Indian American- cultural, specific ...
Depression has been examined from a Western, Asian American and Indian American- cultural, specific ...
The diagnosis and treatment of depressive and anxiety disorders has changed rapidly in the past cent...
This thesis reviews the cultural history of western depressive symptoms and critically examines the ...
The expectation that Chinese individuals tend to present distress in a somatic way, through physical...
Described since the beginning of medicine and considered to be the oldest mental illness, depression...
This paper describes the developing area of cultural psychopathology, an interdisciplinary field of ...
examine key questions that arise from a cross-cultural approach to the study of depression / begins ...
Depression is a highly prevalent mental illness with increasing burden for the patients, their famil...
Decades of cross-cultural research have documented a distinctive form of psychopathology among depre...
With a starting point in John Abela’s groundbreaking developmental psychopathology research on adole...
This thesis is an investigation into cultural variations in experiences of depression. With the aid ...
Though rates of depression are comparable across cultures, similar rates may obscure the diversity o...
Though rates of depression are comparable across cultures, similar rates may obscure the diversity o...
We believe that the application of a culture–mind– brain perspective to Chinese somatization opens u...
Depression has been examined from a Western, Asian American and Indian American- cultural, specific ...
Depression has been examined from a Western, Asian American and Indian American- cultural, specific ...
The diagnosis and treatment of depressive and anxiety disorders has changed rapidly in the past cent...
This thesis reviews the cultural history of western depressive symptoms and critically examines the ...
The expectation that Chinese individuals tend to present distress in a somatic way, through physical...