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Journal Of Youth And Adolescence

Publication date: 2021-08-01
Volume: 50 Pages: 1649 - 1662
Publisher: Springer Verlag

Author:

Verhees, Martine
Finet, Chloë ; Vandesande, Sien ; Bastin, Margot ; Bijttebier, Patricia ; Bodner, Nadja ; Van Aswegen, Tanya ; Van de Walle, Magali ; Bosmans, Guy

Keywords:

Social Sciences, Psychology, Developmental, Psychology, Attachment, Depressive symptoms, Emotion regulation, Adolescence, Adolescent, Anxiety, Child, Depression, Emotional Regulation, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, C14/19/054#55213456, 1303 Specialist Studies in Education, 1701 Psychology, Developmental & Child Psychology, 5201 Applied and developmental psychology, 5203 Clinical and health psychology, 5205 Social and personality psychology

Abstract:

Although widely accepted, attachment theory's hypothesis that insecure attachment is associated with the development of depressive symptoms through emotion regulation strategies has never been longitudinally tested in adolescence. Additionally, previous research only focused on strategies for regulating negative affect, whereas strategies for regulating positive affect may also serve as a mechanism linking insecure attachment to depressive symptoms. This study aimed to fill these research gaps by testing whether the association between attachment and change in depressive symptoms over time is explained by strategies for regulating negative and positive affect in adolescence. Adolescents (N = 1706; 53% girls; Mage = 12.78 years, SDage = 1.54 at Time 1) were tested three times, with a 1-year interval between measurement times. They reported on their attachment anxiety and avoidance at Time 1, depressive symptoms at Times 1 and 3, and regulation of negative affect (brooding and dampening) and positive affect (focusing and reflection) at Time 2. The results from multiple mediation analyses showed that more anxiously attached adolescents developed more depressive symptoms via increased brooding and dampening. More avoidantly attached adolescents developed more depressive symptoms via decreased focusing. These findings provide longitudinal support for attachment theory's emotion regulation hypothesis, and show that the regulation of both negative and positive affect is important.