4.0 Article

Levels and Instability of Daily Self-Esteem in Adolescents: Relations to Depressive and Anxious Symptoms

Journal

RESEARCH ON CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 8, Pages 1083-1095

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10802-021-00802-3

Keywords

Self-esteem; Depression; Anxiety; Daily; Adolescence

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [1247394]

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The study found that daily self-esteem was negatively associated with depressive symptoms but not anxious symptoms in adolescents. Additionally, instability of daily self-esteem was positively related to depressive symptoms, whereas no significant relation was found with anxious symptoms. These differential findings may be linked to differences in the temporal orientation of depressive versus anxious symptoms.
The current study examined whether individual differences in depressive and anxious symptoms relate to level of daily self-esteem and instability of daily self-esteem in adolescence. Participants were a racially and ethnically diverse sample of adolescents (79 girls, 65 boys; M age = 13.53 years). Adolescents reported on their depressive and anxious symptoms during a baseline home visit. Then, adolescents reported on their daily self-esteem over the course of 12 consecutive days. Using hierarchical linear modeling analyses, level of daily self-esteem was negatively associated with depressive but not anxious symptoms. In addition, a positive relation emerged between instability of daily self-esteem and depressive symptoms when controlling for level of self-esteem; a similar relation did not emerge for anxious symptoms. The differential findings that emerged between both level and instability of daily self-esteem and depressive versus anxious symptoms may be linked to differences in the temporal orientation of these two types of internalizing symptoms; specifically, depressive symptoms result from backward-looking rumination over previous experiences, whereas anxious symptoms emerge from forward-looking worry about future events (Wenze et al., 2012).

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