Mania and Low Self-Esteem Article

Winters, KC, Neale, JM. (1985). Mania and Low Self-Esteem . JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY, 94(3), 282-290. 10.1037/0021-843X.94.3.282

cited authors

  • Winters, KC; Neale, JM

authors

abstract

  • The present study tested the theory that although bipolar patients do not report low self-esteem, they do possess a cognitive schema of low self-esteem. Equalsized groups (n = 16) of remitted bipolars, remitted unipolars, and normals completed a self-report battery of tests of self-esteem, social desirability, and self-deception, and a task designed to assess whether self-esteem influences inferences about the causes of imagined events. Remitted bipolars scored the same as normals and higher than remitted depressives on self-esteem, and they scored higher than the other groups on both social desirability and self-deception. Furthermore, remitted bipolars' inferences about the causes of failures resembled those of a depressive, suggesting the presence of a low self-worth schema. The data are consistent with the view that bipolar patients have negative feelings of self which are not revealed on usual self-report inventories. Also, because the remitted depressives showed a "depressive attributional style" on the inference task, issues concerning the mood dependence of depressive cognitions were discussed. © 1985 American Psychological Association.

publication date

  • August 1, 1985

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 282

end page

  • 290

volume

  • 94

issue

  • 3