All Relations between Depression and cognitive conflict

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Daphna Canetti, Sandro Galea, Brian J Hall, Robert J Johnson, Patrick A Palmieri, Stevan E Hobfol. Exposure to prolonged socio-political conflict and the risk of PTSD and depression among Palestinians. Psychiatry. vol 73. issue 3. 2011-01-11. PMID:20843212. exposure to prolonged socio-political conflict and the risk of ptsd and depression among palestinians. 2011-01-11 2023-08-12 Not clear
Theresa Tarrant, Carolyn E Sab. Role conflict, role ambiguity, and job satisfaction in nurse executives. Nursing administration quarterly. vol 34. issue 1. 2011-01-06. PMID:20023564. this article reports the results of a cross-sectional correlational survey design of nurse executives' (nes') views on role conflict, role ambiguity, job satisfaction, and depression. 2011-01-06 2023-08-12 human
Theresa Tarrant, Carolyn E Sab. Role conflict, role ambiguity, and job satisfaction in nurse executives. Nursing administration quarterly. vol 34. issue 1. 2011-01-06. PMID:20023564. results indicated that the respondents had low to moderate amounts of role ambiguity, high levels of job satisfaction, low levels of depression, a negative relationship between role conflict and role ambiguity and job satisfaction, and a positive relationship between role conflict and depression. 2011-01-06 2023-08-12 human
Jason Schnittke. Gene-environment correlations in the stress-depression relationship. Journal of health and social behavior. vol 51. issue 3. 2010-12-17. PMID:20943587. for example, allowing for gene-environment correlations, marital conflict is generally unrelated to depression. 2010-12-17 2023-08-12 Not clear
Annette van Randenborgh, Renate de Jong-Meyer, Joachim Hüffmeie. Decision making in depression: differences in decisional conflict between healthy and depressed individuals. Clinical psychology & psychotherapy. vol 17. issue 4. 2010-11-02. PMID:19844960. decision making in depression: differences in decisional conflict between healthy and depressed individuals. 2010-11-02 2023-08-12 human
Timothy W Smith, Emily K Traupman, Bert N Uchino, Cynthia A Ber. Interpersonal circumplex descriptions of psychosocial risk factors for physical illness: application to hostility, neuroticism, and marital adjustment. Journal of personality. vol 78. issue 3. 2010-09-27. PMID:20573134. risk factors displayed ipc locations ranging from hostile dominance (e.g., verbal aggressiveness, marital conflict) to hostility (e.g., anger) to hostile submissiveness (e.g., anxiety, depression); protective factors (marital satisfaction and support) reflected warmth or friendliness in the ipc. 2010-09-27 2023-08-12 Not clear
S F Kaaya, J K Mbwambo, G P Kilonzo, H Van Den Borne, M T Leshabari, M C Smith Fawzi, H Schaalm. Socio-economic and partner relationship factors associated with antenatal depressive morbidity among pregnant women in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Tanzania journal of health research. vol 12. issue 1. 2010-09-09. PMID:20737826. interventions for early recognition of depression should target women with a history of previous depressive episodes or low satisfaction with ability to access basic needs, conflict in partner relationships and relatively earlier booking for antenatal care. 2010-09-09 2023-08-12 human
Aaron B Rochlen, Debora A Paterniti, Ronald M Epstein, Paul Duberstein, Lindsay Willeford, Richard L Kravit. Barriers in diagnosing and treating men with depression: a focus group report. American journal of men's health. vol 4. issue 2. 2010-08-31. PMID:19477750. first, participants described aspects of the male gender as being in conflict or incongruent with their experiences of depression and beliefs about appropriate help-seeking behaviors. 2010-08-31 2023-08-12 human
Catharine H Duma. Models of depression. Vitamins and hormones. vol 82. 2010-08-20. PMID:20472130. longer-term models include chronic mild stress models, early-life stress models, and social conflict models, which may more accurately simulate processes that lead to depression. 2010-08-20 2023-08-12 human
Bridget K Biggs, Jennifer Mize Nelson, Marilyn L Sampil. Peer relations in the anxiety-depression link: test of a mediation model. Anxiety, stress, and coping. vol 23. issue 4. 2010-08-10. PMID:19916088. adolescents completed measures of anxiety symptoms, depression symptoms, peer group experiences (i.e., peer acceptance and victimization from peers), and friendship quality (i.e., positive qualities and conflict). 2010-08-10 2023-08-12 Not clear
Amber L Mackey, Mary Ellen Fromuth, David B Kell. The association of sibling relationship and abuse with later psychological adjustment. Journal of interpersonal violence. vol 25. issue 6. 2010-08-09. PMID:19734372. in addition, the current study examined how the emotional context of the sibling relationship (i.e., rivalry and conflict) moderated the relationship between sibling abuse and later psychological adjustment (i.e., depression and anxiety). 2010-08-09 2023-08-12 Not clear
Akiomi Inoue, Norito Kawakam. Interpersonal conflict and depression among Japanese workers with high or low socioeconomic status: findings from the Japan Work Stress and Health Cohort Study. Social science & medicine (1982). vol 71. issue 1. 2010-07-27. PMID:20444532. interpersonal conflict and depression among japanese workers with high or low socioeconomic status: findings from the japan work stress and health cohort study. 2010-07-27 2023-08-12 human
Akiomi Inoue, Norito Kawakam. Interpersonal conflict and depression among Japanese workers with high or low socioeconomic status: findings from the Japan Work Stress and Health Cohort Study. Social science & medicine (1982). vol 71. issue 1. 2010-07-27. PMID:20444532. research that focuses on the relationship between interpersonal conflict at work (i.e., intragroup conflict and intergroup conflict) and depression that also considers differences in socioeconomic status (ses) is limited. 2010-07-27 2023-08-12 human
Akiomi Inoue, Norito Kawakam. Interpersonal conflict and depression among Japanese workers with high or low socioeconomic status: findings from the Japan Work Stress and Health Cohort Study. Social science & medicine (1982). vol 71. issue 1. 2010-07-27. PMID:20444532. the purpose of the current study is to investigate the relationship between interpersonal conflict at work and depression at different levels of ses. 2010-07-27 2023-08-12 human
Akiomi Inoue, Norito Kawakam. Interpersonal conflict and depression among Japanese workers with high or low socioeconomic status: findings from the Japan Work Stress and Health Cohort Study. Social science & medicine (1982). vol 71. issue 1. 2010-07-27. PMID:20444532. these participants were surveyed using a self-administered questionnaire that included self-reported measures of interpersonal conflict at work (intragroup conflict and intergroup conflict), ses (education and occupation), worksite support (supervisor support and coworker support), depression (assessed using the center for epidemiologic studies depression [ces-d] scale), and other demographic covariates. 2010-07-27 2023-08-12 human
Akiomi Inoue, Norito Kawakam. Interpersonal conflict and depression among Japanese workers with high or low socioeconomic status: findings from the Japan Work Stress and Health Cohort Study. Social science & medicine (1982). vol 71. issue 1. 2010-07-27. PMID:20444532. the association of interpersonal conflict with depression was significantly greater among males of a high ses (i.e., higher educational status and non-manual workers) than males of a low ses (i.e., lower educational status and manual workers) after adjusting for demographic variables, supervisor support, and coworker support. 2010-07-27 2023-08-12 human
Akiomi Inoue, Norito Kawakam. Interpersonal conflict and depression among Japanese workers with high or low socioeconomic status: findings from the Japan Work Stress and Health Cohort Study. Social science & medicine (1982). vol 71. issue 1. 2010-07-27. PMID:20444532. more specifically, the association of intergroup conflict with depression was significantly greater among males of a high ses than males of a low ses. 2010-07-27 2023-08-12 human
Akiomi Inoue, Norito Kawakam. Interpersonal conflict and depression among Japanese workers with high or low socioeconomic status: findings from the Japan Work Stress and Health Cohort Study. Social science & medicine (1982). vol 71. issue 1. 2010-07-27. PMID:20444532. the current study suggests that males of a higher ses are more vulnerable to interpersonal conflict at work in terms of developing depression than males of a lower ses. 2010-07-27 2023-08-12 human
Robert West, Peter Choi, Stephanie Traver. The influence of negative affect on the neural correlates of cognitive control. International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology. vol 76. issue 2. 2010-07-21. PMID:20226219. negative affect, as measured with the beck depression inventory ii, was associated with a decrease in the amplitude of a pre-stimulus slow wave and an increase in the amplitude of the medial frontal negativity, and was weakly related to the amplitude of the conflict sustained potential. 2010-07-21 2023-08-12 Not clear
K A Alexander, J W McNutt, M B Briggs, P E Standers, P Funston, G Hemson, D Keet, M van Vuure. Multi-host pathogens and carnivore management in southern Africa. Comparative immunology, microbiology and infectious diseases. vol 33. issue 3. 2010-07-13. PMID:19038454. conservation effort should be focused at securing large metapopulations able to compensate for expected episodic generalist pathogen invasion and attention directed to addressing underlying causes of population depression such as habitat loss and wildlife conflict. 2010-07-13 2023-08-12 Not clear