1. Depression, negative emotionality, and self-referential language: A multi-lab, multi-measure, and multi-language-task research synthesis
- Author
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Andrea B. Horn, Angela L. Carey, Nicholas S. Holtzman, James W. Pennebaker, Allison Mary Tackman, To'Meisha S. Edwards, M. Brent Donnellan, Matthias R. Mehl, David A. Sbarra, University of Zurich, and Tackman, Allison M
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Self-concept ,UFSP13-4 Dynamics of Healthy Aging ,Context (language use) ,PsycINFO ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,Sex Factors ,3312 Sociology and Political Science ,Germany ,Humans ,Personality ,Association (psychology) ,Language ,media_common ,Depressive Disorder ,3207 Social Psychology ,Pronoun ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,Linguistics ,Middle Aged ,Possessive ,Self Concept ,United States ,Self-reference ,Female ,150 Psychology ,Psychology ,Social psychology - Abstract
Depressive symptomatology is manifested in greater first-person singular pronoun use (i.e., I-talk), but when and for whom this effect is most apparent, and the extent to which it is specific to depression or part of a broader association between negative emotionality and I-talk, remains unclear. Using pooled data from N = 4,754 participants from 6 labs across 2 countries, we examined, in a preregistered analysis, how the depression-I-talk effect varied by (a) first-person singular pronoun type (i.e., subjective, objective, and possessive), (b) the communication context in which language was generated (i.e., personal, momentary thought, identity-related, and impersonal), and (c) gender. Overall, there was a small but reliable positive correlation between depression and I-talk (r = .10, 95% CI [.07, .13]). The effect was present for all first-person singular pronouns except the possessive type, in all communication contexts except the impersonal one, and for both females and males with little evidence of gender differences. Importantly, a similar pattern of results emerged for negative emotionality. Further, the depression-I-talk effect was substantially reduced when controlled for negative emotionality but this was not the case when the negative emotionality-I-talk effect was controlled for depression. These results suggest that the robust empirical link between depression and I-talk largely reflects a broader association between negative emotionality and I-talk. Self-referential language using first-person singular pronouns may therefore be better construed as a linguistic marker of general distress proneness or negative emotionality rather than as a specific marker of depression. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2019