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Individual differences in the emergence of depressive symptoms in children and adolescents: A longitudinal investigation of parent and child reports.
187
Citations
91
References
2002
Year
Individual DifferencesAdolescent Behavioral HealthEducationMental HealthChild Mental HealthCross-domain Latent GrowthAdolescencePsychologyDevelopmental PsychologyMood SymptomLongitudinal DesignDepressive SymptomsLongitudinal InvestigationChild PsychologyPsychiatryDepressionGender DifferencesAdolescent PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentChild DevelopmentAdolescent CognitionPediatricsMedicineChild PsychiatryPsychopathology
The authors address questions about the rate that depressive symptoms emerge, developmental and gender differences in this rate, and differences between parent and child estimates of this rate. In a 12-wave, cohort-sequential, longitudinal design, 1,570 children (Grades 4-11) and parents completed reports about children's depression. Cross-domain latent growth curve analysis revealed that (a) the rate of symptom growth varied with developmental level. (b) gender differences symptom growth preceded emergence of mean level gender differences, (c) the rate of symptom development varied with age, and (d) parent-child agreement about rate of symptom change was stronger than agreement about time-specific symptoms. The authors suggest that predictability of depressive symptoms varies with age and the dimension under investigation.
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