Transcultural research into psychopathology has often failed to produce a systematic body of findings concerning the relationship between culture and psychopathology. In this paper an attempt is made to overcome this problem by examining the relationship between culture and depression in terms of a theoretical task. Japanese and Australian depressed patients were given measures of depression and decision making. The relationship between specific variables associated with depression and those associated with decision making was investigated. Results showed those depression variables which influenced decision making for Japanese patients were different to those for Australian patients. These findings are discussed in terms of their implicatio...
The majority of cross-cultural research in depression provides 'snap-shot' depictions of various cul...
The expectation that Chinese individuals tend to present distress in a somatic way, through physical...
We believe that the application of a culture–mind– brain perspective to Chinese somatization opens u...
The debate on the role of culture on psychiatric epidemiology has evolved considerably in the past t...
To examine the different understandings of depression between Chinese and Americans, we employed con...
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group There is growing global consensus for...
Cultural differences in the prevalence and symptomatology of depression have been well documented. E...
Described since the beginning of medicine and considered to be the oldest mental illness, depression...
Though rates of depression are comparable across cultures, similar rates may obscure the diversity o...
This study investigated the influence of culture and depression on (1) emotion priming reactions, (2...
examine key questions that arise from a cross-cultural approach to the study of depression / begins ...
Accurate comparisons of the prevalence of psychiatric disorders across Eastern and Western cultures ...
The present research interrogates the greater tendency for Chinese people to somaticize depression r...
This paper aimed to examine whether the mental disorders observed in the Western cultural context...
The aim of this study was to explore cultural differences in causal attributions and beliefs about h...
The majority of cross-cultural research in depression provides 'snap-shot' depictions of various cul...
The expectation that Chinese individuals tend to present distress in a somatic way, through physical...
We believe that the application of a culture–mind– brain perspective to Chinese somatization opens u...
The debate on the role of culture on psychiatric epidemiology has evolved considerably in the past t...
To examine the different understandings of depression between Chinese and Americans, we employed con...
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group There is growing global consensus for...
Cultural differences in the prevalence and symptomatology of depression have been well documented. E...
Described since the beginning of medicine and considered to be the oldest mental illness, depression...
Though rates of depression are comparable across cultures, similar rates may obscure the diversity o...
This study investigated the influence of culture and depression on (1) emotion priming reactions, (2...
examine key questions that arise from a cross-cultural approach to the study of depression / begins ...
Accurate comparisons of the prevalence of psychiatric disorders across Eastern and Western cultures ...
The present research interrogates the greater tendency for Chinese people to somaticize depression r...
This paper aimed to examine whether the mental disorders observed in the Western cultural context...
The aim of this study was to explore cultural differences in causal attributions and beliefs about h...
The majority of cross-cultural research in depression provides 'snap-shot' depictions of various cul...
The expectation that Chinese individuals tend to present distress in a somatic way, through physical...
We believe that the application of a culture–mind– brain perspective to Chinese somatization opens u...