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Depression and the melancholic temperament
123
Citations
43
References
1995
Year
Psychiatric DisordersMental HealthMelancholic TemperamentSocial SciencesPsychologyAffective SciencePersonality DisorderBroad Affective DispositionsMood SymptomCommon Genetic DiathesisPersonality DisordersPsychiatric DiseasePsychiatryDepressionPsychiatric DisorderMood SpectrumMajor Depressive DisorderMood DisordersBiological PsychiatryHigh Negative TemperamentMedicinePsychopathology
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.
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