# Affective temperaments, self-schemas, and their interplay with emotional distress

**Authors:** Manel Monsonet, Karen Fagian-Núñez, Thomas R. Kwapil, Neus Barrantes-Vidal

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1732425 · 2026-01-15

## TL;DR

This study shows how self-schemas connect personality traits called affective temperaments to emotional distress like depression and anxiety.

## Contribution

First empirical evidence that self-schemas mediate the link between affective temperaments and emotional symptoms.

## Key findings

- Positive self-schemas are linked to hyperthymic temperament and reduce cyclothymic and depressive temperaments.
- Negative self-schemas are associated with cyclothymic and depressive temperaments and mediate temperament-distress relationships.
- Modifying self-schemas could help reduce emotional distress from temperamental vulnerabilities.

## Abstract

Affective temperaments and self-schemas are theorized to shape susceptibility to emotional distress, yet their interplay remains empirically unexplored. This study investigates (1) associations between affective temperaments and positive and negative self-schemas, and (2) whether positive and negative self-schemas mediate the temperament-distress relationship.

A cross-sectional sample of 808 young adults (mean age = 20.8; 77.2% female) completed the TEMPS-A (affective temperaments), BCSS (self-schemas), and SCL-90-R (depressive/anxiety symptoms). Spearman correlations and parallel mediation analyses tested hypotheses.

Positive self-schemas showed a positive association with hyperthymic temperament and inverse association with cyclothymic and depressive temperaments. Negative self-schemas were associated with cyclothymic and depressive temperaments and inversely associated with hyperthymic temperament. Mediation analyses revealed that both positive and negative self-schemas significantly mediated the relationships between cyclothymic, depressive, hyperthymic, and anxious temperaments with depressive symptoms. Conversely, positive self-schemas only mediated the pathway from hyperthymic temperament to anxiety symptoms, whereas negative self-schemas mediated all temperament-anxiety pathways.

This study provides the first empirical evidence that self-schemas act as mediating mechanisms linking affective temperaments to affective symptoms. Our findings thereby support a biopsychosocial model of emotional distress, founded on the interaction between genetically-influenced temperaments and socially-constructed self-schemas. Consequently, therapeutic interventions designed to modify self-schemas may represent an effective strategy for mitigating the pathway from temperamental vulnerability to emotional distress.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** distress (MESH:D012128), anxiety (MESH:D001007), depressive (MESH:D003866)

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12853105/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12853105