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      Weighing the Costs of Disaster: Consequences, Risks, and Resilience in Individuals, Families, and Communities.

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          Conservation of resources: A new attempt at conceptualizing stress.

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            Stress, social support, and the buffering hypothesis.

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              Responses to depression and their effects on the duration of depressive episodes.

              I propose that the ways people respond to their own symptoms of depression influence the duration of these symptoms. People who engage in ruminative responses to depression, focusing on their symptoms and the possible causes and consequences of their symptoms, will show longer depressions than people who take action to distract themselves from their symptoms. Ruminative responses prolong depression because they allow the depressed mood to negatively bias thinking and interfere with instrumental behavior and problem-solving. Laboratory and field studies directly testing this theory have supported its predictions. I discuss how response styles can explain the greater likelihood of depression in women than men. Then I intergrate this response styles theory with studies of coping with discrete events. The response styles theory is compared to other theories of the duration of depression. Finally, I suggest what may help a depressed person to stop engaging in ruminative responses and how response styles for depression may develop.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Psychol Sci Public Interest
                Psychological science in the public interest : a journal of the American Psychological Society
                1529-1006
                1529-1006
                Jan 2010
                : 11
                : 1
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Teachers College, Columbia University gab38@columbia.edu.
                [2 ] University College London.
                [3 ] Indiana University of Pennsylvania Opole University.
                [4 ] University of Miami.
                Article
                11/1/1
                10.1177/1529100610387086
                26168411
                fdbbb9b7-e89f-4fca-a266-fd8284468cf1
                History

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