ELIZA cgi-bash version rev. 1.90
- Medical English LInking keywords finder for the PubMed Zipped Archive (ELIZA) -

return kwic search for response out of >500 occurrences
343831 occurrences (No.54 in the rank) during 5 years in the PubMed. [no cache] 500 found
352) Findings revealed that this integrated model fit the data better than the response style theory and explained 1.2% more variance in depressive symptoms.
--- ABSTRACT ---
PMID:24381001 DOI:10.1007/s10964-013-0087-2
2015 Journal of youth and adolescence
* Integrating Beck's cognitive model and the response style theory in an adolescent sample.
- Depression becomes more prevalent as individuals progress from childhood to adulthood. Thus, empirically supported and popular cognitive vulnerability theories to explain depression in adulthood have begun to be tested in younger age groups, particularly adolescence, a time of significant cognitive development. Beck's cognitive theory and the response style theory are well known, empirically supported theories of depression. The current, two-wave longitudinal study (N = 462; mean age = 16.01 years; SD = 0.69; 63.9% female) tested various proposed integrative models of Beck's cognitive theory and the response style theory, as well as the original theories themselves, to determine if and how these cognitive vulnerabilities begin to intertwine in adolescence. Of the integrative models tested-all with structural equation modeling in AMOS 21-the best-fitting integrative model was a moderation model wherein schemata influenced rumination, and rumination then influenced other cognitive variables in Beck's model. Findings revealed that this integrated model fit the data better than the response style theory and explained 1.2% more variance in depressive symptoms. Additionally, multigroup analyses comparing the fit of the best-fitting integrated model across adolescents with clinical and subclinical depressive symptoms revealed that the model was not stable between these two subsamples. However, of the hypotheses relevant to the integrative model, only 1 of the 18 associations was significantly different between the clinical and subclinical samples. Regardless, the integrated model was not superior to the more parsimonious model from Beck's cognitive theory. Implications and limitations are discussed.
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(1)146 to (14)4 proteins (27)3 time (40)2 following
(2)32 *null* (15)4 rates (28)3 times (41)2 from
(3)31 and (16)4 that (29)3 which (42)2 including
(4)22 of (17)4 the (30)2 (ABR) (43)2 latency
(5)21 rate (18)3 at (31)2 (DDR) (44)2 mediated
(6)14 was (19)3 during (32)2 (UPR) (45)2 or
(7)13 in (20)3 elements (33)2 after (46)2 rate)
(8)8 selection (21)3 models (34)2 are (47)2 rates,
(9)7 surface (22)3 options (35)2 boundaries (48)2 such
(10)6 data (23)3 properties (36)2 delays (49)2 theory
(11)6 is (24)3 strategies (37)2 effects (50)2 validity
(12)4 for (25)3 style (38)2 element (51)2 were
(13)4 patterns (26)3 suppression (39)2 evaluation

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--- WordNet output for response --- =>反応, 応答, 返答, 返報, 反響, 答唱句 Overview of noun response The noun response has 7 senses (first 5 from tagged texts) 1. (11) response -- (a result; "this situation developed in response to events in Africa") 2. (11) reaction, response -- (a bodily process occurring due to the effect of some antecedent stimulus or agent; "a bad reaction to the medicine"; "his responses have slowed with age") 3. (6) answer, reply, response -- (a statement (either spoken or written) that is made to reply to a question or request or criticism or accusation; "I waited several days for his answer"; "he wrote replies to several of his critics") 4. (4) reception, response -- (the manner in which something is greeted; "she did not expect the cold reception she received from her superiors") 5. (1) response -- (a phrase recited or sung by the congregation following a versicle by the priest or minister) 6. reply, response -- (the speech act of continuing a conversational exchange; "he growled his reply") 7. response -- (the manner in which an electrical or mechanical device responds to an input signal or a range of input signals) --- WordNet end ---