Excessive support seeking and lack of receiving social support have been associated with depression onset and unfavorable course of depression. It has been assumed that social support is effected by observable behaviors that express involvement. Twenty-five patients with major depression were studied during a social interaction with their partner and a similar interaction, with a stranger, matched on the sex and age of the partner. We anticipated that (1) partners would display less involvement behaviors to the depressed patients than would strangers and that (2) lack of involvement would predict an unfavorable course of depression, as assessed for depression remission within 6 months of admission. The social interactions, conducted at admi...
Coyne's interactional formulation of depression (Coyne, 1976) states that the demands for support of...
Recent approaches to the study of clinical depression stress the role of interpersonal processes in ...
The purpose of this study was to replicate and extend the findings of previous research addressing C...
Excessive support seeking and lack of receiving social support have been associated with depression ...
High neuroticism and low extraversion are related to depression and its recurrence. We investigated ...
Depressed patients' support-seeking behaviour and the responses to this behaviour by others (support...
Observed behaviour of a psychiatrist interacting with severely depressed patients during an intervie...
Observed behaviour of a psychiatrist interacting with severely depressed patients during an intervie...
Fifty-one remitted depressed inpatients and their interviewers were observed during a conversation. ...
Nonverbal support seeking behavior of 11 mildly depressed patients was studied in relation to the no...
Humans need meaningful social interactions, but little is known about the consequences of not having...
This study examined whether the interaction of severely depressed patients and a psychiatrist was re...
Coyne's interactional formulation of depression (Coyne, 1976) states that the demands for support of...
Recent approaches to the study of clinical depression stress the role of interpersonal processes in ...
The purpose of this study was to replicate and extend the findings of previous research addressing C...
Excessive support seeking and lack of receiving social support have been associated with depression ...
High neuroticism and low extraversion are related to depression and its recurrence. We investigated ...
Depressed patients' support-seeking behaviour and the responses to this behaviour by others (support...
Observed behaviour of a psychiatrist interacting with severely depressed patients during an intervie...
Observed behaviour of a psychiatrist interacting with severely depressed patients during an intervie...
Fifty-one remitted depressed inpatients and their interviewers were observed during a conversation. ...
Nonverbal support seeking behavior of 11 mildly depressed patients was studied in relation to the no...
Humans need meaningful social interactions, but little is known about the consequences of not having...
This study examined whether the interaction of severely depressed patients and a psychiatrist was re...
Coyne's interactional formulation of depression (Coyne, 1976) states that the demands for support of...
Recent approaches to the study of clinical depression stress the role of interpersonal processes in ...
The purpose of this study was to replicate and extend the findings of previous research addressing C...