Thomas J Harrison, Daniel N Klein, Josephine H Shih
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However, men do not typically exhibit communal vulnerabilities to the degree that women do. Thus, it is also important to broaden the scope of vulnerability factors examined to include vulnerabilities associated with stress generation in men. These could include impulsivity, anger and aggression, and the need for autonomy and self-definition, all of which tend to be more common in males. Lastly, studies often employ self-report measures of SLEs which could artificially accentuate gender differences in stress generation findings. As existing studies may be more sensitive to detecting stress generation in women, future research should examine this phenomenon with the following methodological refinements: (a) use male-only or adequately sized samples with equal gender representation to test gender moderation effects, (b) expand the range of SLEs to include agentic and achievement-oriented stressors and use wider assessment windows, and (c) examine vulnerability factors that may be relevant to men such as impulsivity, anger, aggression, and the need for autonomy and self-definition. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).</p>","PeriodicalId":73914,"journal":{"name":"Journal of psychopathology and clinical science","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":3.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-10-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"A viewpoint on stress generation methodology.\",\"authors\":\"Thomas J Harrison, Daniel N Klein, Josephine H Shih\",\"doi\":\"10.1037/abn0000964\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>This article provides an overview of Stress Generation Methodology. Stress generation is a phenomenon in which individuals with depression or vulnerability to depression experience greater dependent stressful life events (SLEs), defined as stressors in which individuals at least partially contributed to occurrence. The stress generation process demonstrates how depressed individuals shape their environments, contributing to depression maintenance and exacerbation. Subsequent extensions have shown that other forms of psychopathology and a variety of cognitive and personality risk factors also predict stress generation. The focus on stress generation in women is accompanied by an emphasis on interpersonal stress. In addition to emphasizing communal SLEs, stress generation studies have also focused on communal vulnerability factors. However, men do not typically exhibit communal vulnerabilities to the degree that women do. Thus, it is also important to broaden the scope of vulnerability factors examined to include vulnerabilities associated with stress generation in men. These could include impulsivity, anger and aggression, and the need for autonomy and self-definition, all of which tend to be more common in males. Lastly, studies often employ self-report measures of SLEs which could artificially accentuate gender differences in stress generation findings. As existing studies may be more sensitive to detecting stress generation in women, future research should examine this phenomenon with the following methodological refinements: (a) use male-only or adequately sized samples with equal gender representation to test gender moderation effects, (b) expand the range of SLEs to include agentic and achievement-oriented stressors and use wider assessment windows, and (c) examine vulnerability factors that may be relevant to men such as impulsivity, anger, aggression, and the need for autonomy and self-definition. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本文概述了压力生成方法。压力生成是一种现象,在这种现象中,抑郁症患者或易患抑郁症的人经历了更大的依赖性压力生活事件(SLEs),SLEs 的定义是个人至少在一定程度上促成了事件发生的压力因素。压力生成过程展示了抑郁症患者如何塑造自己的环境,从而导致抑郁症的维持和加重。随后的延伸研究表明,其他形式的精神病理学以及各种认知和人格风险因素也能预测压力的产生。在关注女性压力产生的同时,也强调了人际压力。除了强调群体性 SLE 外,压力产生的研究还关注群体脆弱性因素。然而,男性通常不会像女性那样表现出群体脆弱性。因此,扩大易受伤害因素的研究范围,将与男性压力产生有关的易受伤害因素包括在内也很重要。这些因素可能包括冲动性、愤怒和攻击性,以及对自主和自我定义的需求,所有这些因素往往在男性中更为常见。最后,研究通常采用自我报告的 SLE 测量方法,这可能会人为地加剧压力产生结果的性别差异。由于现有研究对检测女性压力产生的敏感度可能更高,因此未来的研究应在方法上进行以下改进,以检测这一现象:(a) 使用纯男性样本或具有同等性别代表性的适当大小的样本来测试性别调节效应,(b) 扩大 SLE 的范围,以包括代理型和成就导向型压力源,并使用更宽的评估窗口,以及 (c) 检查可能与男性相关的脆弱性因素,如冲动、愤怒、攻击性以及对自主性和自我定义的需求。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved)。
This article provides an overview of Stress Generation Methodology. Stress generation is a phenomenon in which individuals with depression or vulnerability to depression experience greater dependent stressful life events (SLEs), defined as stressors in which individuals at least partially contributed to occurrence. The stress generation process demonstrates how depressed individuals shape their environments, contributing to depression maintenance and exacerbation. Subsequent extensions have shown that other forms of psychopathology and a variety of cognitive and personality risk factors also predict stress generation. The focus on stress generation in women is accompanied by an emphasis on interpersonal stress. In addition to emphasizing communal SLEs, stress generation studies have also focused on communal vulnerability factors. However, men do not typically exhibit communal vulnerabilities to the degree that women do. Thus, it is also important to broaden the scope of vulnerability factors examined to include vulnerabilities associated with stress generation in men. These could include impulsivity, anger and aggression, and the need for autonomy and self-definition, all of which tend to be more common in males. Lastly, studies often employ self-report measures of SLEs which could artificially accentuate gender differences in stress generation findings. As existing studies may be more sensitive to detecting stress generation in women, future research should examine this phenomenon with the following methodological refinements: (a) use male-only or adequately sized samples with equal gender representation to test gender moderation effects, (b) expand the range of SLEs to include agentic and achievement-oriented stressors and use wider assessment windows, and (c) examine vulnerability factors that may be relevant to men such as impulsivity, anger, aggression, and the need for autonomy and self-definition. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).