Clinical depression and day-to-day social interaction in a community sample.

J Abnorm Psychol

Department of Psychology, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia 23187-8795, USA.

Published: February 2000

Adult participants recruited from the community, one half of whom met criteria for clinical depression, described their day-to-day social interactions using a variant of the Rochester Interaction Record. Compared with the nondepressed participants, depressed participants found their interactions to be less enjoyable and less intimate, and they felt less influence over their interactions. Differences between the two groups in intimacy occurred only in interactions with close relations and not in interactions with nonintimates, and differences in influence were more pronounced for those who were cohabiting than for those who were not. There were no differences in how socially active depressed and nondepressed people were or in the amount of contact they had with different relational partners.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1037//0021-843x.109.1.11DOI Listing

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