It would be difficult to overstate the magnitude of the burden depressive disorders pose, not only to society and to the friends and relatives of those afflicted, but especially to depressed people themselves. Marital discord is a substantial risk factor for major depression, and this investigation is designed to clarify the nature of the association between depression and discord through detailed examination of inter-spousal criticism. The purpose is two-fold. First of all, this investigation seeks to determine whether perceptions of excessive spousal criticism are due to depressed people's biased perceptions of otherwise benign communications or to their accurate perceptions of comments from genuinely hypercritical spouses. Secondly, this study seeks to clarify and contextualize various individual differences predisposing to sending and receiving criticism. Carefully diagnosed depressed and non-depressed married people and their spouses will participate in a laboratory session during which they each complete marital, symptom, and personality questionnaires as well as undertaking a dyadic criticism perception accuracy task. The stimulus interaction for the criticism accuracy task will be a social support discussion of something one spouse would like to change about themselves. Both spouses then review the interaction videotape. The target spouses indicate time-linked thoughts and feelings they recall having experienced during the original interaction. Non-target (""""""""source"""""""") partners review these same moments and indicate the thoughts and feelings they perceived their spouse as having experienced as well as disclosing their own intentions as they recall having them during the original interaction. Signal detection analyses will be deployed to determine the accuracy and bias in inferring criticism as evidenced by discrepancies between the two spouses' reports. Outside observers will also provide criticality ratings for comparison purposes. The role of individual differences in perceiving and emitting criticism will also be examined.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Small Research Grants (R03)
Project #
1R03MH066301-01A2
Application #
6727133
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-BBBP-5 (01))
Program Officer
Otey, Emeline M
Project Start
2003-12-01
Project End
2005-11-30
Budget Start
2003-12-01
Budget End
2004-11-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2004
Total Cost
$74,250
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Notre Dame
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
824910376
City
Notre Dame
State
IN
Country
United States
Zip Code
46556
Peterson, Kristina M; Smith, David A (2011) Attributions for spousal behavior in relation to criticism and perceived criticism. Behav Ther 42:655-66
Peterson, Kristina M; Smith, David A (2010) An actor-partner interdependence model of spousal criticism and depression. J Abnorm Psychol 119:555-62
Peterson, Kristina M; Smith, David A; Windle, Chaunce R (2009) Explication of interspousal criticality bias. Behav Res Ther 47:478-86
Smith, David A; Peterson, Kristina M (2008) Overperception of spousal criticism in dysphoria and marital discord. Behav Ther 39:300-12