• Title of article

    Brief report: Adolescentsʹ co-rumination with mothers, co-rumination with friends, and internalizing symptoms

  • Author/Authors

    Waller، نويسنده , , Erika M. and Rose، نويسنده , , Amanda J.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
  • Pages
    5
  • From page
    429
  • To page
    433
  • Abstract
    The current research examined co-rumination (extensively discussing, rehashing, and speculating about problems) with mothers and friends. Of interest was exploring whether adolescents who co-ruminate with mothers were especially likely to co-ruminate with friends as well as the interplay among co-rumination with mothers, co-rumination with friends, and anxious/depressed symptoms. Early- to mid-adolescents (N = 393) reported on co-rumination and normative self-disclosure with mothers and friends and on their internalizing symptoms in this cross-sectional study. Co-rumination with mothers (but not normative self-disclosure) was concurrently associated with adolescentsʹ co-rumination with friends. In addition, the relation between co-rumination with mothers and adolescentsʹ anxious/depressed symptoms reported previously (Waller & Rose, 2010) became non-significant when co-rumination with friends was statistically controlled. This suggests that the relation between friendship co-rumination and anxious/depressed symptoms may help explain the relation between mother-child co-rumination and anxious/depressed symptoms. Potential implications for promoting adolescentsʹ well-being are discussed.
  • Keywords
    depression , Co-rumination , Mother-child , Anxiety , Friendship
  • Journal title
    Journal of Adolescence
  • Serial Year
    2013
  • Journal title
    Journal of Adolescence
  • Record number

    1496455