Is Depression Best Viewed as a Continuum or Discrete Category? A Taxometric Analysis of Childhood and Adolescent Depression in a Population-Based Sample.
Top Cited Papers
- 1 February 2005
- journal article
- Published by American Psychological Association (APA) in Journal of Abnormal Psychology
- Vol. 114 (1), 96-110
- https://doi.org/10.1037/0021-843x.114.1.96
Abstract
The authors examined the latent structure of depression in a population-based sample of children and adolescents. Youth's self-reports and parents' reports of the youth's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed.; DSM-IV; American Psychiatric Association, 1994) major depressive symptoms were assessed via a structured clinical interview. The authors used Meehl's (1995) taxometric procedures to discern whether youth depression is dimensional or categorical. Taxometric analyses that explicitly took into account the skewness of depressive symptoms suggested that depression is a dimensional, not categorical, construct. The dimensional structure of depression was obtained for all of the DSM-IV major depressive symptoms as well as for different domains of depression (emotional distress symptoms and vegetative, involuntary defeat symptoms), youth and parent reports, and different subsamples (i.e., boys vs. girls and younger vs. older youth).Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Structure of Child and Adolescent Psychopathology: Generating New Hypotheses.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 2004
- What's in a Taxon?Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 2004
- Consideration of the Challenges, Complications, and Pitfalls of Taxometric Analysis.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 2004
- Normal variation and abnormality: an empirical study of the liability distributions underlying depression and delinquencyJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2003
- Taxonicity of adolescent melancholia: a categorical or dimensional construct?Journal of Psychiatric Research, 2002
- The latent structure of analogue depression: Should the Beck Depression Inventory be used to classify groups?Psychological Assessment, 2002
- Childhood depression: clinical phenomenology and classificationPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2001
- Bootstraps taxometrics: Solving the classification problem in psychopathology.American Psychologist, 1995
- Isolation and characterization of a nuclear depressive syndromePsychological Medicine, 1987
- The Cost of DichotomizationApplied Psychological Measurement, 1983