However, the magnitude of the associations between changes in social problem solving and
subsequent depressive symptoms did not differ across treatment conditions.
Not exact matches
Self - efficacy
did not predict
subsequent levels of
depressive symptoms.
The finding that self - efficacy levels
did not predict
subsequent levels of
depressive symptoms is in contrast to previous studies that found that emotional (Bandura et al. 2003) and academic self - efficacy (Scott and Dearing 2012) negatively predicted
subsequent levels of
depressive symptoms.
The self - efficacy domains
did not predict
subsequent levels of
depressive symptoms.
In line with earlier findings about the association between problematic peer relations and depression in childhood and adolescence (Ladd and Troop - Gordon 2003; La Greca and Moore Harrison 2005; Pedersen et al. 2007), we
did not find sex differences in the association between clique isolation and
subsequent depressive symptoms and also not in the mediating role of loneliness and social self perception.
In contrast, social anxiety
did not mediate the relationship between these stressors and
subsequent depressive symptoms.