2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2014.11.046
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The inter-relationship between mood, self-esteem and response styles in adolescent offspring of bipolar parents: An experience sampling study

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Cited by 18 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…For example, an independent study reported that high-risk offspring experiencing negative affect responded with rumination, while controls showed both rumination and increased active (adaptive) coping. 20 Lower self-esteem in high-risk offspring but not in controls triggered increased risk taking, while rumination lowered self-esteem at a later time point. In a prior analysis from the Canadian cohort, we found that lower self-esteem predicted a 2.5-fold increased risk of a mood episode and evidence of an interaction effect such that the risk of mood disorder was increased in those offspring with both avoidant coping and lower self-esteem.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…For example, an independent study reported that high-risk offspring experiencing negative affect responded with rumination, while controls showed both rumination and increased active (adaptive) coping. 20 Lower self-esteem in high-risk offspring but not in controls triggered increased risk taking, while rumination lowered self-esteem at a later time point. In a prior analysis from the Canadian cohort, we found that lower self-esteem predicted a 2.5-fold increased risk of a mood episode and evidence of an interaction effect such that the risk of mood disorder was increased in those offspring with both avoidant coping and lower self-esteem.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…This observation is consistent with the hypothesis of a psychological vulnerability in young people at familial risk of mood disorder that might identify a subgroup that would warrant and benefit from prospective symptom monitoring. For example, an independent study reported that high‐risk offspring experiencing negative affect responded with rumination, while controls showed both rumination and increased active (adaptive) coping . Lower self‐esteem in high‐risk offspring but not in controls triggered increased risk taking, while rumination lowered self‐esteem at a later time point.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, AA designs that tap coping at a momentary level can place considerable demands on youthful participants—which may be reflected in high drop out and/or low compliance rates (McCabe, Mack, & Fleeson, ). Indeed, small sample sizes can be an issue with momentary coping approaches (e.g., Kubiak et al., ; Pavlickova, Turnbull, Myin‐Germeys, & Bentall, ). As an alternative, by sampling more intensively over the day, or extending the sampling period, which generally run between 5 (Tan et al., ) to 14 days (Ranzenhofer et al., ), researchers can increase their power to detect effects.…”
Section: Coping Measurement In Ambulatory Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As noted above, short‐term emotional relief does not necessarily equate with an adaptive coping outcome. Although several studies seek to bypass this conundrum by predicting affect at the next adjacent time point (e.g., Pavlickova et al., ), moving the time scale one interval beyond the trigger may not be far enough to tap longer term emotional outcomes. Further shifting out the time scale means that any number of external factors may also be influencing mood, thus adding inevitable noise in outcome measurement.…”
Section: The Process Of Coping: the Trigger And The Outcomementioning
confidence: 99%
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