Indecisiveness moderates the relationship between rumination modes and depressive symptoms
Brandon Winchell, Iony D. Ezawa

TL;DR
This study finds that indecisiveness affects how different types of rumination relate to depressive symptoms, suggesting both factors should be considered together in depression treatment.
Contribution
The study reveals that aversive indecisiveness moderates the relationship between abstract and concrete rumination modes and depressive symptoms.
Findings
Aversive indecisiveness strengthens the link between abstract rumination and depressive symptoms.
In the general population sample, indecisiveness also strengthens the negative link between concrete rumination and depressive symptoms.
The findings suggest that abstract rumination and indecisiveness together increase risk for depressive symptoms.
Abstract
Major depressive disorder is a debilitating and common mental health condition. Rumination and indecisiveness are both well-established cognitive risk factors for depressive symptoms, but their interactive effects remain underexplored. Drawing on theories about rumination's level of construal, which distinguish between abstract and concrete modes of thinking, this study examined whether aversive indecisiveness moderates the relationships between rumination modes (abstract and concrete) and concurrent depressive symptoms. We recruited two samples: an undergraduate student sample (Sample 1, N = 412) and a general population sample (Sample 2, N = 258). Participants completed self-report measures of depressive symptoms, rumination modes, and indecisiveness. Robust linear regression was used to test moderating effect of aversive indecisiveness on rumination modes while controlling for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes · Mind wandering and attention · Optimism, Hope, and Well-being
