Increases in manic symptoms after life events involving goal attainment.

Standard

Increases in manic symptoms after life events involving goal attainment. / Johnson, S L; Sandrow, D; Meyer, Björn; Winters, R; Miller, I; Solomon, D; Keitner, G.

in: J ABNORM PSYCHOL, Jahrgang 109, Nr. 4, 4, 2000, S. 721-727.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Johnson, SL, Sandrow, D, Meyer, B, Winters, R, Miller, I, Solomon, D & Keitner, G 2000, 'Increases in manic symptoms after life events involving goal attainment.', J ABNORM PSYCHOL, Jg. 109, Nr. 4, 4, S. 721-727. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11195996?dopt=Citation>

APA

Johnson, S. L., Sandrow, D., Meyer, B., Winters, R., Miller, I., Solomon, D., & Keitner, G. (2000). Increases in manic symptoms after life events involving goal attainment. J ABNORM PSYCHOL, 109(4), 721-727. [4]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11195996?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Johnson SL, Sandrow D, Meyer B, Winters R, Miller I, Solomon D et al. Increases in manic symptoms after life events involving goal attainment. J ABNORM PSYCHOL. 2000;109(4):721-727. 4.

Bibtex

@article{34661fed895b4440897144eb5efc9eda,
title = "Increases in manic symptoms after life events involving goal attainment.",
abstract = "Bipolar disorder has been conceptualized as an outcome of dysregulation in the behavioral activation system (BAS), a brain system that regulates goal-directed activity. On the basis of the BAS model, the authors hypothesized that life events involving goal attainment would promote manic symptoms in bipolar individuals. The authors followed 43 bipolar I individuals monthly with standardized symptom severity assessments (the Modified Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression and the Bech-Rafaelsen Mania Rating Scale). Life events were assessed using the Goal Attainment and Positivity scales of the Life Events and Difficulties Schedule. As hypothesized, manic symptoms increased in the 2 months following goal-attainment events, but depressed symptoms were not changed following goal-attainment events. These results are congruent with a series of recent polarity-specific findings.",
author = "Johnson, {S L} and D Sandrow and Bj{\"o}rn Meyer and R Winters and I Miller and D Solomon and G Keitner",
year = "2000",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "109",
pages = "721--727",
journal = "J ABNORM PSYCHOL",
issn = "0021-843X",
publisher = "American Psychological Association Inc.",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Increases in manic symptoms after life events involving goal attainment.

AU - Johnson, S L

AU - Sandrow, D

AU - Meyer, Björn

AU - Winters, R

AU - Miller, I

AU - Solomon, D

AU - Keitner, G

PY - 2000

Y1 - 2000

N2 - Bipolar disorder has been conceptualized as an outcome of dysregulation in the behavioral activation system (BAS), a brain system that regulates goal-directed activity. On the basis of the BAS model, the authors hypothesized that life events involving goal attainment would promote manic symptoms in bipolar individuals. The authors followed 43 bipolar I individuals monthly with standardized symptom severity assessments (the Modified Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression and the Bech-Rafaelsen Mania Rating Scale). Life events were assessed using the Goal Attainment and Positivity scales of the Life Events and Difficulties Schedule. As hypothesized, manic symptoms increased in the 2 months following goal-attainment events, but depressed symptoms were not changed following goal-attainment events. These results are congruent with a series of recent polarity-specific findings.

AB - Bipolar disorder has been conceptualized as an outcome of dysregulation in the behavioral activation system (BAS), a brain system that regulates goal-directed activity. On the basis of the BAS model, the authors hypothesized that life events involving goal attainment would promote manic symptoms in bipolar individuals. The authors followed 43 bipolar I individuals monthly with standardized symptom severity assessments (the Modified Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression and the Bech-Rafaelsen Mania Rating Scale). Life events were assessed using the Goal Attainment and Positivity scales of the Life Events and Difficulties Schedule. As hypothesized, manic symptoms increased in the 2 months following goal-attainment events, but depressed symptoms were not changed following goal-attainment events. These results are congruent with a series of recent polarity-specific findings.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 109

SP - 721

EP - 727

JO - J ABNORM PSYCHOL

JF - J ABNORM PSYCHOL

SN - 0021-843X

IS - 4

M1 - 4

ER -