Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10441223 | Personality and Individual Differences | 2005 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Three personality and sociocultural variables-self-concealment, self-esteem, and masculinity-were evaluated for their role in mediating the relation between self-silencing and depression. There were 825 male and female undergraduates who completed a questionnaire package that included the relevant measures. An analysis of structural equation models supported two hypothesized conceptualizations, each fitting either sex. For females, depression was predicted directly by self-silencing, self-concealment, and self-esteem, and mediated by indirect paths from self-concealment through self-esteem, from self-silencing through both self-concealment and self-esteem, and from masculinity through each of self-silencing, self-concealment, and self-esteem. For males, depression was predicted directly by self-silencing and self-concealment only, and mediated by indirect paths from self-silencing through both self-concealment and self-esteem, and from masculinity through each of self-silencing, self-concealment, and self-esteem. Among male respondents, self-esteem played a negligible role in levels of depression.
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Authors
Kenneth M. Cramer, Melanie D. Gallant, Michelle W. Langlois,