Alloy et al Flashcards
Cognitive vulnerability hypothesis
There are maladaptive thinking patterns that make a person
more likely to develop a mental illness- negative thoughts are not likely to change and affect all
areas of one’s life
Aim
to see how one’s cognitive style (thinking pattern) plays in the development of depression
Procedure
- Half of sample had history of clinical depression, other half did not, but no symptoms
were reflected at the beginning of the study - Given a test to measure cognitive style and identified as either High Risk (HR) or Low
Risk (LR) for depression based on thinking patterns - Follow up assessment for 5.5 years- combination of questionnaires and structured
interview to identify stressful life events, cognitive style and symptoms of depression - Listened to a list of adjectives and asked whether that word described them and told to
recall list
Results
- In the group with no prior history of depression, 17% of HR students developed Major
Depressive Disorder, compared to only 1% of LR students. - 29% of HR group showed symptoms of minor depression, compared to only 6% of LR
group - Those with past history, 27% of HR group relapsed whereas only 6% of LR group did
- Rate of suicidality was higher in the HR group compared to the LR group
- HR group remembered more negative adjectives.
Evaluation
Method and data triangulation- increasing credibility
- Measure of cognitive style was highly standardized
- Pre-test and post-test design diminished bidirectional ambiguity but still a quasiexperiment so no cause-and-effect relationship
- Link between cognitive style and depression may be more complex than the study
proposes
- The theory of cognitive vulnerability has been applied to therapy and is shown to be
effective.