Ordination and Cognitive Complexity as Related to Clinical Depression
作者:
JOSEPH ANGELILLO,
PETER CIMBOLIC,
JOSEPH DOSTER,
JOEL CHAPMAN,
期刊:
The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease
(OVID Available online 1985)
卷期:
Volume 173,
issue 9
页码: 546-553
ISSN:0022-3018
年代: 1985
出版商: OVID
数据来源: OVID
摘要:
Personal construct psychology has contributed substantially to our understanding of psychopathology. The few studies of personal construct psychology in depression have focused on the content of self-constructs and cognitive complexity. The purpose of this study was to examine the construct system in depressed patients by investigating the relation of depressive symptoms to the content of constructs about others, cognitive complexity, and ordination.Participants were divided into three groups of 25. The depressed group had either a major depressive episode or dysthymic disorder; psychiatric controls had nonaffective psychological disorders; normal controls were hospital employees who had not exhibited psychological distress.Results indicated no differences among the three groups in cognitive complexity. However, normal controls exhibited a higher degree of ordination than either patient group. Furthermore, depressed and psychiatric controls utilized ambiguous constructs more than normal subjects. Finally, symptom severity within the depressed group related to the use of ambiguous and undesirable constructs.On the basis of these and others' results, a “two-level” personal construct explanation of depression is offered. On a comprehensive level, ordination and the use of ambiguous constructs could be viewed as relating to general psychological adaptation, whereas negative self-construing (and perhaps ambiguous construing) may relate more directly to depression. Therapeutic implications and directions for future research are discussed.
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