Negative or stressful life events are robust risk factors for depression and anxiety. Less attention has been paid to the positive aspects of events and whether positivity buffers the impact of the negative aspects of events. In this study, we examined the positivity and negativity of interpersonal and noninterpersonal episodic life events in predicting anxiety and depressive symptoms in a sample of 373 young adults. Regressions tested the main and interactive effects of positivity and negativity ratings of events in predicting symptom factors (fears, anhedonia-apprehension, general distress) relevant to anxiety and depression. A significant interaction demonstrated that positivity protected against high levels of negativity of noninterpersonal events in predicting general distress. A main effect of interpersonal negativity predicting higher anhedonia-apprehension was observed. Results for fears were nonsignificant. Findings suggest that the positivity of life events may buffer against negativity in predicting symptoms shared between anxiety and depression.
The Role of Positive and Negative Aspects of Life Events in Depressive and Anxiety Symptoms
Julia S. Yarrington,Allison V. Metts,R. Zinbarg,R. Nusslock,K. Wolitzky-Taylor,C. Hammen,Nicholas J. Kelley,S. Bookheimer,M. Craske
Published 2023 in Clinical psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2023
- Venue
Clinical psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science
- Publication date
2023-03-14
- Fields of study
Medicine, Psychology
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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