ISSN 0439-755X
CN 11-1911/B
主办:中国心理学会
   中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理学报 ›› 2006, Vol. 38 ›› Issue (06): 886-901.

• • 上一篇    下一篇

乐观、悲观倾向与抑郁的关系及压力、性别的调节作用

陶沙   

  1. 北京师范大学“认知神经科学与学习”国家重点实验室,北京 100875
  • 收稿日期:2005-07-13 修回日期:1900-01-01 发布日期:2006-11-30 出版日期:2006-11-30
  • 通讯作者: 陶沙

Optimism, Pessimism and Depression:
The Relations and Differences by Stress Level and Gender

Tao-Shao   

  1. State Key Laboratory for Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning, Beijing Normal University, Beijing 100875, China
  • Received:2005-07-13 Revised:1900-01-01 Online:2006-11-30 Published:2006-11-30
  • Contact: Tao Shao

摘要: 采用问卷法,考察了334名大学生的乐观、悲观两种一般结果期待倾向与其抑郁感受的关系,以及压力水平和性别的可能调节作用。研究结果表明:(1)乐观倾向、悲观倾向既显著相关又存在相对独立性,二者对于抑郁的作用在强度上有所不同。其中,悲观倾向对于抑郁变异的独立贡献率较高。(2)压力水平是认知倾向与抑郁关系的显著调节因素,主要作用表现为随着压力水平的增高,乐观倾向的保护意义具有增强的趋势。(3)性别也具有一定的调节作用,主要表现在悲观倾向对于男性大学生抑郁的影响作用更强。特别是在控制压力水平的情况下,性别对于悲观倾向和抑郁关系的调节作用更为明显

关键词: 乐观, 悲观, 抑郁, 性别, 压力, 调节作用

Abstract: Optimism and pessimism are two dimensions of the generalized outcome expectancies. They have been shown to play important roles in predicting depression among various populations. Whereas optimism and pessimism have been repeatedly revealed as two separate constructs, they were viewed as the bipolar opposites in many previous studies. The present study was aimed to examine if optimism and pessimism have distinct roles in depression among university students. Moreover, the moderator effects of stress level were tested to examine the vulnerability hypothesis about the role of optimism proposed in previous studies. The gender differences in the roles of optimism and pessimism were also examined.
Three hundred and thirty-four students (female and male students: 167 in each group) with diverse majors from three universities in Beijing completed questionnaires about their general outcome expectancies, depression and stress. The Life Orientation Test (Scheier, & Carver, 1985) was used to measure students’ optimism and pessimism (Cronbach’α = 0.70), the Chinese version of CES-D (Radloff, 1977) was administered to measure students’ depression (Cronbach’α = 0.87), and a stress rating questionnaire was applied to measure students’ stress level (Cronbach’α = 0.84 ).
The results indicated that optimism and pessimism were significantly but modestly correlated (r = -0.26, p < 0.001). Hierarchical multiple regression analysis showed that while both of them explained unique variance of depression, pessimism explained relatively greater proportion than optimism did. In addition to groups of students who scored higher than average in either optimism or pessimism and lower than average in the other dimension (percentages for the group of optimism and the group of pessimism: 35.9%, 23.4%), there were other groups of students who scored higher than average (19.8%) or lower than average (21%) in both optimism and pessimism. MANOVA further revealed significant group differences in stress and depression. Stress level moderated the relation between optimism and depression in a way that the protective effect of optimism became more salient with increasing stress level. Gender moderated the relation between pessimism and depression to some extent. When stress level was included into the predictive model as a covariate, the negative effect of pessimism was much stronger among male students.
Taken these results together, optimism and pessimism are two related but distinct dimensions of general outcome expectancies, and have different roles in depression. The protective roles of optimism tend to be more important for students with higher stress level, and the destructive roles of pessimism tend to increase for male students with higher level of stress. The vulnerability hypothesis about the role of optimism was not supported

Key words: optimism, pessimism, depression, stress level, gender, moderator effects

中图分类号: