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Journal Article

Citation

Watson D, Clark LA. Eur. J. Pers. 1995; 9(5): 351-366.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1995, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/per.2410090505

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

We examine how depression relates to two broad affective dispositions which we call 'Negative Temperament' and 'Positive Temperament'. Depressed individuals characteristically display a particular combination of these traits (high Negative/low Positive Temperament), which also defines the traditional 'melancholic' type. Other evidence, however, suggests that this pattern is not unique to depression, but may also characterize other types of disorder: high Negative Temperament, in particular, appears to be nonsignificantly associated with distress-based psychopathology. Finally, we review data indicating that the etiology of these relations is highly complex. Specifically, it appears that (i) temperament influences the development and course of depression; (ii) depressive episodes can lead to significant changes in temperament, some of which may be permanent; and (iii) temperament and depression may reflect, in part, a common genetic diathesis.


Language: en

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