“…Authors of the final article, Adam Pervez, Lisa L. Brady, Ken Mullane, Kevin D. Lo, Andrew A. Bennett, and Terry A. Nelson, employed quantitative and qualitative research methodologies to study the effects among management doctoral students of “impostor syndrome,” which Clance and Imes (1978) define in terms of persistent feelings of self-doubt, fraudulence, and impending failure; and how this can contribute to depression and anxiety symptoms among these students as well as degrading their psychological well-being. Pervez et al (2021) also looked at whether social support from family, friends, advisors, and classmates can help to ameliorate such symptoms. Results demonstrated that, compared with the general adult population, management doctoral students experience significantly more symptoms of depression and anxiety; and that these appear to be related to the presence of impostor syndrome among these students.…”