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| Publications of Clive J Robins :chronological combined listing:%% Journal Articles @article{fds6162, Author = {C.J. Robins and Krause, E. D. and Lynch, T. R.}, Title = {A mediational model relating sociotropy, ambivalence over emotional expression, and disordered eating}, Journal = {Psychology of Women Quarterly}, Volume = {24}, Pages = {328-335}, Year = {2000}, Key = {fds6162} } @article{fds6160, Title = {Congruence of personality and life events in depression}, Journal = {Journal of Abnormal Psychology}, Volume = {99}, Pages = {393-397}, Year = {1990}, Key = {fds6160} } @article{fds51828, Author = {Lett, H. S. and Blumenthal, J. A. and Babyak, M. A. and Sherwood, A. and Strauman, T. and Robins, C. and Newman, M. F}, Title = {Depression as a risk factor for coronary artery disease: Evidence, mechanisms, and treatment}, Journal = {Psychosomatic Medicine}, Volume = {66}, Pages = {305-315}, Year = {2004}, Key = {fds51828} } @article{fds6163, Author = {C.J. Robins and Ivanoff, A. M. and Linehan, M. M.}, Title = {Dialectical behavior therapy}, Pages = {437- 459}, Booktitle = {Handbook of personality disorders: Theory, research and treatment}, Publisher = {New York: Guilford Press}, Editor = {W. J. Livesley}, Year = {2001}, Key = {fds6163} } @article{fds51822, Author = {Koons, C. R. and Chapman, A. L. and Betts, B. B. and O’Rourke, B. and Morse, N. and Robins, C. J}, Title = {Dialectical behavior therapy adapted for the vocational rehabilitation of significantly disabled mentally ill adults}, Journal = {Cognitive and Behavioral Practice}, Volume = {13}, Pages = {146-156}, Publisher = {Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies}, Year = {2006}, Key = {fds51822} } @article{fds51824, Author = {C.J. Robins}, Title = {Dialectical behavior therapy for borderline personality disorder}, Journal = {Psychiatric Annals}, Volume = {32}, Pages = {608-616}, Year = {2002}, Key = {fds51824} } @article{fds51825, Author = {Lynch, T. R. and Morse, J. Q. and Mendelson, T. and Robins, C. J}, Title = {Dialectical behavior therapy for depressed older adults: A randomized pilot study}, Journal = {American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry}, Volume = {11}, Pages = {33-45}, Year = {2003}, Key = {fds51825} } @article{fds51827, Author = {Robins, C. J. and Chapman, A. L}, Title = {Dialectical behavior therapy: Current status, recent developments, and future directions}, Journal = {Journal of Personality Disorders}, Volume = {18}, Pages = {73-89}, Year = {2004}, Key = {fds51827} } @article{fds6164, Author = {C.J. Robins and Koons, C. R. and Tweed, J. L. and Lynch, T. R. and Gonzalez, A. M. and Morse, J. Q. and et al.}, Title = {Efficacy of dialectical behavior therapy in women veterans with borderline personality disorder}, Journal = {Behavior Therapy}, Volume = {32}, Pages = {371-390}, Year = {2001}, Key = {fds6164} } @article{fds6161, Author = {C.J. Robins and Block, P. and Hayes, A. M. and Kramer, R. J. and Villena, M.}, Title = {Interpersonal and achievement concerns and the depressive vulnerability and symptom specificity hypotheses: A prospective study}, Journal = {Cognitive Therapy and Research}, Volume = {19}, Pages = {1-20}, Year = {1995}, Key = {fds6161} } @article{fds51829, Author = {Morse, J. Q. and Robins, C. J}, Title = {Personality-life event congruence effects in late-life depression}, Journal = {Journal of Affective Disorders}, Volume = {84}, Pages = {25-31}, Year = {2005}, Key = {fds51829} } @article{fds6166, Author = {C.J. Robins and Mendelson, T. and Johnson, C. S.}, Title = {Relations of sociotropy and autonomy to developmental experiences among psychiatric patients}, Journal = {Cognitive Therapy and Research}, Volume = {26}, Pages = {189-198}, Year = {2002}, Key = {fds6166} } @article{fds6167, Author = {C.J. Robins and Morse, J. Q. and Gittes-Fox, M.}, Title = {Relations of sociotropy and autonomy to DSM-III-R personality disorder criteria in psychiatric patients}, Journal = {Journal of Personality Disorders}, Volume = {16}, Pages = {549-560}, Year = {2002}, Key = {fds6167} } @article{fds51844, Author = {Lett, H. S. and Blumenthal, J. A. and Babyak, M. A. and Strauman, T. and Robins, C. J. and Sherwood, A}, Title = {Social support and coronary heart disease: Epidemiologic evidence and implications for treatment}, Journal = {Psychosomatic Medicine}, Volume = {67}, Pages = {869-878}, Year = {2005}, Key = {fds51844} } @article{fds6165, Title = {Zen principles and mindfulness practice in dialectical behavior therapy}, Journal = {Cognitive and Behavioral Practice}, Volume = {9}, Pages = {50-57}, Year = {2002}, Key = {fds6165} } %% Papers Published @article{fds135953, Author = {S Yen and CJ Robins and N Lin}, Title = {A cross-cultural comparison of depressive symptom manifestation: China and the United States.}, Journal = {Journal of consulting and clinical psychology, United States}, Volume = {68}, Number = {6}, Pages = {993-9}, Year = {2000}, Month = {December}, ISSN = {0022-006X}, Keywords = {Adult • Asian Americans • China • Cross-Cultural Comparison* • Depression • Ethnic Groups • European Continental Ancestry Group • Female • Humans • Male • Personality Inventory • Psychometrics • Reproducibility of Results • Somatoform Disorders • Students • United States • diagnosis • ethnology • ethnology* • psychology • psychology* • statistics & numerical data}, Abstract = {This study compared depressive symptomatology among Chinese psychiatric outpatients versus the general Chinese population, and across 3 cultural groups--Chinese, Chinese American, and Caucasian American students--by use of the Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D; L. S. Radloff, 1977) and the Chinese Depression Scale (N. Lin, 1989), translated from the CES-D. Results indicate that Chinese patients (n = 112) endorsed a higher proportion of somatic symptoms than nonpatients (n = 112). The intercultural comparison found that Chinese students (n = 98) had the lowest levels of somatic depressive symptom endorsement compared to both U.S. groups (n = 198). These findings seem to suggest that the tendency toward somatic symptom reporting is not any greater among Chinese populations but may be a function of having a mental illness or of help seeking in China.}, Key = {fds135953} } @article{fds135930, Author = {CJ Robins}, Title = {Attributions and depression: why is the literature so inconsistent?}, Journal = {Journal of personality and social psychology, UNITED STATES}, Volume = {54}, Number = {5}, Pages = {880-9}, Year = {1988}, Month = {May}, ISSN = {0022-3514}, Keywords = {Cognition • Depressive Disorder • Humans • Internal-External Control* • Research Design • psychology* • standards}, Abstract = {A large body of literature examining the relations between depression and causal attributions has produced inconsistent findings. Many studies have clearly had inadequate statistical power, however, so that negative findings cannot be readily interpreted. In this review, statistical power was computed for all published analyses relating depression to attributions to any of the following: internal, stable, or global causes, or their composite, ability/character, effort/behavior, luck, or task difficulty. On average, the power of these analyses was very poor. For example, only 8 of the 87 analyses had a probability of .80 or better of detecting a small-medium true population effect (e.g., r = .20). Separating studies by levels of power helped to clarify the inconsistencies in the literature. Whereas across all published studies depression was fairly consistently related only to the composite of internal, stable, and global attributions, those few studies with fairly high power all reported significant relations of depression to stable and global attributions as well as to the composite. It is suggested that increased attention be paid to the power of statistical analyses in planning studies and in drawing conclusions from completed studies.}, Key = {fds135930} } @article{fds135933, Author = {B Chabon and CJ Robins}, Title = {Cognitive distortions among depressed and suicidal drug abusers.}, Journal = {The International journal of the addictions, UNITED STATES}, Volume = {21}, Number = {12}, Pages = {1313-29}, Year = {1986}, Month = {December}, ISSN = {0020-773X}, Keywords = {Adjustment Disorders • Cognition Disorders • Depressive Disorder • Humans • Psychotherapy • Substance-Related Disorders • Suicide* • complications* • prevention & control • therapy}, Abstract = {A very high proportion of drug abusers have psychiatric problems, with depressive symptoms particularly common. Nonabusing depressed patients have been found to demonstrate elevated levels of cognitive distortions, relative to normals, and to benefit from therapies that address such cognitive distortions. The present study investigated the prevalence of cognitive distortions in a sample of 52 inpatient depressed and/or suicidal drug abusers. Levels of cognitive distortion were found to be comparable to those reported in other studies for noninpatient depressed subjects, but lower than those of nonabusing depressed inpatients. Within the present relatively homogeneous sample, degree of cognitive distortion was nevertheless related to levels of depression, hopelessness, and suicidality. It is concluded that cognitive therapy may be indicated for depressed drug abusers.}, Key = {fds135933} } @article{fds135931, Author = {TR Lynch and CJ Robins and JQ Morse}, Title = {Couple functioning in depression: the roles of sociotropy and autonomy.}, Journal = {Journal of clinical psychology, United States}, Volume = {57}, Number = {1}, Pages = {93-103}, Year = {2001}, Month = {January}, ISSN = {0021-9762}, Keywords = {Adult • Aged • Dependency (Psychology)* • Depressive Disorder • Female • Freedom* • Humans • Interpersonal Relations* • Male • Middle Aged • Questionnaires • Social Adjustment • diagnosis • psychology*}, Abstract = {We evaluated the hypothesis that interpersonal relationships of depressed persons would vary as a function of the personality variables sociotropy and autonomy. Depressed psychiatric patients who reported being in a current intimate relationship for at least six months were administered measures of sociotropy, autonomy, and several aspects of relationship functioning. Results indicated that sociotropy was related significantly to patients' reporting their own behavior as demanding and their partners' behavior as withdrawing, whereas autonomy was related to patients' reporting their partners' behavior as demanding and their own behavior as withdrawing. Autonomy also was related to greater relationship dissatisfaction, and there was a trend for autonomy to be related to greater criticism of the partner. The results are consistent with a model in which sociotropy and autonomy increase vulnerability to depression, in part, through their effects on interpersonal relationships.}, Key = {fds135931} } @article{fds135932, Author = {CJ Robins}, Title = {Development of experimental mood induction procedures for testing personality-event interaction models of depression.}, Journal = {Journal of clinical psychology, UNITED STATES}, Volume = {44}, Number = {6}, Pages = {958-63}, Year = {1988}, Month = {November}, ISSN = {0021-9762}, Keywords = {Achievement* • Depression • Female • Individuality* • Male • Motivation* • Personality Tests* • Psychometrics • Rejection (Psychology)* • psychology*}, Abstract = {Cognitive-behavioral and psychodynamic theorists have suggested recently that depressions may be differentiated on the basis of two sets of personality characteristics that each create emotional vulnerability to a different specific class of events. The present paper reports the development of two mood induction procedures that may be useful in testing this specific interactional approach. In these inductions, subjects listen to an audiotape that depicts either a series of social rejections or achievement failures and are instructed to imagine themselves as the main character. Both tapes were found to produce a strong increase in reported depressed affect in a sample of normal undergraduates (N = 119). These effects were large in comparison to those elicited by other mood induction procedures. Women reported greater mood shifts than men in response to both tapes. The present procedures have the advantage of content specificity that permits tests of personality-event interaction hypotheses.}, Key = {fds135932} } @article{fds135954, Author = {CJ Robins and P Block and ED Peselow}, Title = {Endogenous and non-endogenous depressions: relations to life events, dysfunctional attitudes and event perceptions.}, Journal = {The British journal of clinical psychology / the British Psychological Society, ENGLAND}, Volume = {29 ( Pt 2)}, Pages = {201-7}, Year = {1990}, Month = {May}, ISSN = {0144-6657}, Keywords = {Adaptation, Psychological* • Adult • Attitude* • Depressive Disorder • Female • Humans • Internal-External Control • Life Change Events* • Male • Middle Aged • Personality Tests • Psychiatric Status Rating Scales • Risk Factors • Self Concept* • diagnosis • psychology*}, Abstract = {A comparison was made between endogenous and non-endogenous depressed patients on several characteristics on which they traditionally have been asserted to differ, and which play important roles in cognitive approaches to depression. The non-endogenous patients reported more dysfunctional attitudes and a greater number of recent life events than did endogenous patients. These results support the distinction between endogenous and non-endogenous depressions, and suggest that cognitive theories of aetiology may be more relevant for the latter group. However, both groups perceived their recent upsetting events in relatively maladaptive ways, consistent with the idea that biased perceptions are more related to the depressive state, whereas dysfunctional attitudes may represent a trait vulnerability.}, Key = {fds135954} } @article{fds135935, Title = {Goldfried, M. R., & Robins, C. J. (1982). On the facilitation of self-efficacy. Cognitive Therapy and Research, 6, 361-380.}, Year = {1982}, Key = {fds135935} } @article{fds135934, Title = {Johnson-Laird, P. N., Robins, C. J., & Velicogna, L. (1974). Memory for words. Nature, 251, 704-705.}, Year = {1974}, Key = {fds135934} } @article{fds135939, Title = {Koenig, H.G., George, L.K., Robins, C.J., Stangl, D., & Tweed, D.L. (1994). The development of a dysfunctional attitudes scale for medically ill elders (DASMIE). The Clinical Gerontologist, 15(2), 3-22.}, Year = {1994}, Key = {fds135939} } @article{fds135946, Title = {Lynch, T. R., Johnson, C. S., Mendelson, T., Robins, C. J., Krishnan, K. R. R. & Blazer, D. G. (1999). Correlates of suicidal ideation among an elderly depressed sample. Journal of Affective Disorders, 56, 9-15.}, Year = {1999}, Key = {fds135946} } @article{fds135947, Title = {Lynch, T. R., Johnson, C. S., Mendelson, T., Robins, C. J., Krishnan, K. R. R. & Blazer, D. G. (1999). New onset and remission of suicidal ideation among depressed adult sample. Journal of Affective Disorders, 56, 49-54.}, Year = {1999}, Key = {fds135947} } @article{fds135948, Title = {Lynch, T. R., Mendelson, T., Robins, C. J., Krishnan, K. R. R., George, L.K., Johnson, C. S., & Blazer, D. G. (1999). Perceived social support among depressed elderly, middle-aged, and young adult samples: Cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses. Journal of Affective Disorders, 55, 159-170.}, Year = {1999}, Key = {fds135948} } @article{fds135943, Title = {Lynch, T.R., & Robins, C.J. (1997). Treatment of borderline personality disorder using dialectical behavior therapy. The Journal of the California Alliance for the Mentally Ill, 8 (1), 47-49.}, Year = {1997}, Key = {fds135943} } @article{fds135955, Author = {IW Leigh and CJ Robins and J Welkowitz}, Title = {Modification of the Beck Depression Inventory for use with a deaf population.}, Journal = {Journal of clinical psychology, UNITED STATES}, Volume = {44}, Number = {5}, Pages = {728-32}, Year = {1988}, Month = {September}, ISSN = {0021-9762}, Keywords = {Adult • Deafness • Depressive Disorder • Female • Humans • Male • Psychological Tests* • Psychometrics • diagnosis • psychology*}, Abstract = {Research on depression in deaf individuals has been hampered by difficulties in assessment that result from the linguistic problems many deaf persons have with the English language. We report preliminary psychometric data on a modification of the Beck Depression Inventory in which it was simplified linguistically for use with the deaf population. Internal consistency of the revised version of 56 hearing college students was good and very close to that of the original version in a separate sample of 56 hearing students. Mean scores on the two versions were also very similar. Internal consistency of the revision in a sample of 102 deaf college students was moderately good, but lower than in the hearing sample. The results are considered encouraging for further instrument development.}, Key = {fds135955} } @article{fds135949, Author = {CJ Robins and P Block}, Title = {Personal vulnerability, life events, and depressive symptoms: a test of a specific interactional model.}, Journal = {Journal of personality and social psychology}, Volume = {54}, Number = {5}, Pages = {847-52}, Year = {1988}, Month = {May}, ISSN = {0022-3514}, Keywords = {Achievement • Adolescent • Adult • Cognition • Dependency (Psychology) • Depression • Female • Humans • Life Change Events* • Male • Models, Psychological* • Motivation • psychology*}, Abstract = {We tested Beck's (1983) hypothesis that depressive symptoms occur when an individual experiences a negative life event that specifically matches the individual's personal motivational vulnerability. Ninety-eight undergraduates completed measures of depression level, recent life events, and sociotropic and autonomous achievement motivations. Consistent with the theory, sociotropy was associated with depression level and also served as a moderator of the relations between depression and frequency of recent negative social events. However, sociotropy also demonstrated nonpredicted interactive effects with negative events categorized a priori as autonomy related. Autonomy was unrelated to depression and showed no evidence of being a vulnerability to any type of life event. The findings generally support the value of examining the role in depression of interactions between personality characteristics and life events, although they do not support the specific matching predictions.}, Language = {eng}, Key = {fds135949} } @article{fds135937, Title = {Peselow, E.D., Robins, C.J., Sanfilipo, M., Block, P., & Fieve, R.R. (1992). Sociotropy and autonomy: Relationship to antidepressant drug treatment response and endogenous/nonendogenous dichotomy. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 101, 479-486.}, Year = {1992}, Key = {fds135937} } @article{fds135950, Author = {CJ Robins and P Block and ED Peselow}, Title = {Relations of sociotropic and autonomous personality characteristics to specific symptoms in depressed patients.}, Journal = {Journal of abnormal psychology}, Volume = {98}, Number = {1}, Pages = {86-8}, Year = {1989}, Month = {February}, ISSN = {0021-843X}, Keywords = {Adolescent • Adult • Depressive Disorder • Female • Humans • Interpersonal Relations* • Male • Middle Aged • Psychological Tests • Social Adjustment* • psychology*}, Abstract = {A number of writers have suggested that two sets of personality characteristics are associated both with vulnerabilities to depression in response to different classes of events and with different clinical presentations of depression. The present study examined the relations between levels of sociotropic and autonomous personality characteristics and specific, theoretically derived clusters of symptoms in 80 unipolar depressed patients. As was predicted, sociotropy was related to the cluster of symptoms associated with the concept of anxious-reactive depression and was unrelated to the autonomous symptoms cluster. In contrast, the predicted relations of autonomous personality characteristics and symptoms were not found. These results support the idea that the symptom picture in depression may be related to personality characteristics, but they also suggest that the measurement of autonomy may require revision.}, Language = {eng}, Key = {fds135950} } @article{fds135936, Title = {Robins, C. J. & Luten, A. G. (1991). Sociotropy and autonomy: Differential patterns of clinical presentation in unipolar depression. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 100, 74-77.}, Year = {1991}, Key = {fds135936} } @article{fds135925, Title = {Robins, C. J. (1990). Congruence of personality and life events in depression. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 99, 393-397.}, Year = {1990}, Key = {fds135925} } @article{fds135945, Title = {Robins, C. J. (1999). A dialectical behavior therapy perspective on the case of Anna. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 6, 60-68.}, Year = {1999}, Key = {fds135945} } @article{fds135957, Title = {Robins, C. J., & Shepard, R. N. (1977). Spatio-temporal probing of apparent rotational movement. Perception and Psychophysics, 22, 12-18. [Reprinted in R. N. Shepard & L. Y. Cooper (Eds.), Mental images and their transformations (pp. 273-286). Montgomery, VT: Bradford Books, 1982.]}, Year = {1977}, Key = {fds135957} } @article{fds135929, Title = {Robins, C. J., Ivanoff, A. M., & Linehan, M. M. (2001). Dialectical behavior therapy. In W. J. Livesley (Ed.), Handbook of personality disorders: Theory, research and treatment (pp. 437-459). New York: Guilford Press.}, Year = {2001}, Key = {fds135929} } @article{fds135944, Title = {Robins, C.J. & Koons, C.R. (2000). The therapeutic relationship in dialectical behavioral therapy. In A.N. Sabo & L.Havens (Eds.), The real world guide to psychotherapy practice (pp. 237-266). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.}, Year = {2000}, Key = {fds135944} } @article{fds135926, Title = {Robins, C.J. (1993). Implications of research on the psychopathology of depression for psychotherapy integration. Journal of Psychotherapy Integration, 3, 313-330.}, Year = {1993}, Key = {fds135926} } @article{fds135928, Title = {Robins, C.J. (1995). Personality-event interaction models of depression. European Journal of Personality, 9, 367-378.}, Year = {1995}, Key = {fds135928} } @article{fds135938, Title = {Robins, C.J., & Hayes, A.M. (1993). An appraisal of cognitive therapy. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 61, 205-214. Reprinted in M.J. Mahoney (Ed.), Cognitive and constructive psychotherapies: Theory, research, and practice (pp.41-65). New York: Springer.}, Year = {1993}, Key = {fds135938} } @article{fds135940, Title = {Robins, C.J., & Hayes, A.M. (1995). The role of causal attributions in the prediction of depression. In G. M.Buchanan & M.E.P. Seligman (Eds.), Explanatory style (pp.71-97). Hillsdale, N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.}, Year = {1995}, Key = {fds135940} } @article{fds135942, Title = {Robins, C.J., Bagby, R.M., Rector, N.A., Lynch, T.R., & Kennedy, S.M. (1997). Sociotropy, autonomy, and patterns of symptoms in patients with major depression: A comparison of dimensional and categorical approaches. Cognitive Therapy and Research, 21, 43-58.}, Year = {1997}, Key = {fds135942} } @article{fds135941, Title = {Robins, C.J., Block, P., Hayes, A.M., Kramer, R.J., & Villena, M. (1995). Interpersonal and achievement concerns and the depressive vulnerability and symptom specificity hypotheses: A prospective study. Cognitive Therapy and Research, 19, 1-20.}, Year = {1995}, Key = {fds135941} } @article{fds135927, Title = {Robins, C.J., Ladd, J.S., Welkowitz, J., Blaney, P., Kutcher, G., & Diaz, R. (1994). The Personal Style Inventory: Preliminary validation studies of new measures of sociotropy and autonomy. Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment, 16, 277-300.}, Year = {1994}, Key = {fds135927} } @article{fds135951, Author = {CJ Robins and K Hinkley}, Title = {Social-cognitive processing and depressive symptoms in children: a comparison of measures.}, Journal = {Journal of abnormal child psychology, UNITED STATES}, Volume = {17}, Number = {1}, Pages = {29-36}, Year = {1989}, Month = {February}, ISSN = {0091-0627}, Keywords = {Child • Cognition* • Depression • Helplessness, Learned • Humans • Internal-External Control • Psychological Tests • Psychometrics • Social Adjustment* • Social Perception* • psychology • psychology*}, Abstract = {We assessed aspects of the reliability and validity of three measures of social-cognitive processing in children that have been developed to investigate the relations of such processes to childhood depression: the Children's Attributional Style Questionnaire (CASQ), the Children's Negative Cognitive Error Questionnaire (CNCEQ), and the Common Beliefs Inventory for Students (CBIS). In an unselected sample of 61 children, aged 8 to 12, the internal consistencies of the total scores on the CNCEQ and the CBIS were good; for the CASQ, it was only moderate. Internal consistencies of all subscale scores were inadequate. Despite this, several subscale and total scores were significantly associated with depressive symptoms, and the measures were generally correlated with each other. Although these data are encouraging concerning the role of social-cognitive processing in childhood depression, the field needs to develop psychometrically stronger measures and to test the role of social cognition in prospective studies of depression.}, Key = {fds135951} } @article{fds135956, Author = {CJ Robins and P Block and ED Peselow}, Title = {Specificity of symptoms in RDC endogenous depression.}, Journal = {Journal of affective disorders, NETHERLANDS}, Volume = {16}, Number = {2-3}, Pages = {243-8}, ISSN = {0165-0327}, Keywords = {Adult • Depressive Disorder • Female • Humans • Male • Middle Aged • Psychological Tests • Psychometrics • diagnosis* • psychology}, Abstract = {The Research Diagnostic Criteria (RDC) define endogenous depression by the presence of a particular subset of depressive symptoms. This typological approach to classification implicitly assumes that endogenous and non-endogenous patients differ only or primarily in this subset of symptoms, rather than simply in severity of all depressive symptoms. We tested this assumption in a sample of 80 patients with a current episode of major depressive disorder. Whereas RDC endogenous patients (n = 53) had significantly higher levels of most criterial symptoms than did non-endogenous patients (n = 27), they differed on almost no non-endogenous symptoms. These findings support the concept of a specific endogenous symptom cluster.}, Key = {fds135956} } @article{fds135952, Author = {IW Leigh and CJ Robins and J Welkowitz and RN Bond}, Title = {Toward greater understanding of depression in deaf individuals.}, Journal = {American annals of the deaf, UNITED STATES}, Volume = {134}, Number = {4}, Pages = {249-54}, Year = {1989}, Month = {October}, ISSN = {0002-726X}, Keywords = {Adolescent • Adult • Deafness • Depression • Female • Humans • Male • Mother-Child Relations • Personality Development • etiology* • psychology*}, Abstract = {We compared the prevalence of depressive symptoms among deaf and hearing college students and examined the relationships among depressive symptoms, personality characteristics, and perceived parental attitudes and behaviors in these two groups. Measures were revised to meet the language needs of the deaf subjects. Mild levels of depressive symptoms were more prevalent in the deaf than in the hearing students, but more severe depression was not. In both groups, depressive symptoms were associated with perceptions of lower maternal care and higher maternal over-protection. Deaf and hearing subjects did not differ on these perceived maternal characteristics. Depressive symptoms were associated with socially dependent personality characteristics in the hearing sample only. We discuss the implications of the findings for the role of personality development in depression in deaf individuals.}, Key = {fds135952} } %% Chapters in Books @misc{fds51826, Author = {Robins, C. J. and Koons, C. R}, Title = {Dialectical behavior therapy for severe personality disorders}, Pages = {221-253}, Booktitle = {Handbook of personality disorders: Theory and practice}, Publisher = {Wiley}, Editor = {J. J. Magnavita}, Year = {2004}, Key = {fds51826} } @misc{fds51830, Author = {Robins, C. J. and Schmidt, H. and Linehan, M. M}, Title = {Dialectical behavior therapy: Synthesizing radical acceptance with skillful means}, Pages = {30-44}, Booktitle = {Mindfulness and acceptance: Expanding the cognitive-behavioral tradition}, Publisher = {Guilford Press}, Editor = {S. C. Hayes and V. M. Follette and M. M. Linehan}, Year = {2004}, Key = {fds51830} } | |
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