| [article] 
					| Titre : | Stress system concordance as a predictor of longitudinal patterns of resilience in adolescence |  
					| Type de document : | texte imprimé |  
					| Auteurs : | Jessica BUTTS, Auteur ; Katherine A. CAROSELLA, Auteur ; Kathryn R. CULLEN, Auteur ; Bonnie KLIMES-DOUGAN, Auteur ; Salahudeen MIRZA, Auteur ; Victoria PAPKE, Auteur ; Andrea WIGLESWORTH, Auteur |  
					| Article en page(s) : | p.2384-2401 |  
					| Mots-clés : | adolescence  depressive symptoms  resilience  self-worth  stress response |  
					| Index. décimale : | PER Périodiques |  
					| Résumé : | Resilience promotes positive adaptation to challenges and may facilitate recovery for adolescents experiencing psychopathology. This work examined concordance across the experience, expression, and physiological response to stress as a protective factor that may predict longitudinal patterns of psychopathology and well-being that mark resilience. Adolescents aged 14 17 at recruitment (oversampled for histories of non-suicidal self-injury; NSSI) were part of a three-wave (T1, T2, T3) longitudinal study. Multi-trajectory modeling produced four distinct profiles of stress experience, expression, and physiology at T1 (High-High-High, Low-Low-Low, High-Low-Moderate, and High-High-Low, respectively). Linear mixed-effect regressions modeled whether the profiles predicted depressive symptoms, suicide ideation, NSSI engagement, positive affect, satisfaction with life, and self-worth over time. Broadly, concordant stress response profiles (Low-Low-Low, High-High-High) were associated with resilient-like patterns of psychopathology and well-being over time. Adolescents with a concordant High-High-High stress response profile showed a trend of greater reduction in depressive symptoms (B = 0.71, p = 0.052), as well as increased global self-worth (B =  0.88, p = 0.055), from T2 to T3 compared to the discordant High-High-Low profile. Concordance across multi-level stress responses may be protective and promote future resilience, whereas blunted physiological responses in the presence of high perceived and expressed stress may indicate poorer outcomes over time. |  
					| En ligne : | https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0954579423000731 |  
					| Permalink : | https://www.cra-rhone-alpes.org/cid/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=519 |  in Development and Psychopathology > 35-5  (December 2023) . - p.2384-2401
 [article] Stress system concordance as a predictor of longitudinal patterns of resilience in adolescence [texte imprimé] / Jessica BUTTS , Auteur ; Katherine A. CAROSELLA , Auteur ; Kathryn R. CULLEN , Auteur ; Bonnie KLIMES-DOUGAN , Auteur ; Salahudeen MIRZA , Auteur ; Victoria PAPKE , Auteur ; Andrea WIGLESWORTH , Auteur . - p.2384-2401.in Development and Psychopathology  > 35-5  (December 2023)  . - p.2384-2401 
					| Mots-clés : | adolescence  depressive symptoms  resilience  self-worth  stress response |  
					| Index. décimale : | PER Périodiques |  
					| Résumé : | Resilience promotes positive adaptation to challenges and may facilitate recovery for adolescents experiencing psychopathology. This work examined concordance across the experience, expression, and physiological response to stress as a protective factor that may predict longitudinal patterns of psychopathology and well-being that mark resilience. Adolescents aged 14 17 at recruitment (oversampled for histories of non-suicidal self-injury; NSSI) were part of a three-wave (T1, T2, T3) longitudinal study. Multi-trajectory modeling produced four distinct profiles of stress experience, expression, and physiology at T1 (High-High-High, Low-Low-Low, High-Low-Moderate, and High-High-Low, respectively). Linear mixed-effect regressions modeled whether the profiles predicted depressive symptoms, suicide ideation, NSSI engagement, positive affect, satisfaction with life, and self-worth over time. Broadly, concordant stress response profiles (Low-Low-Low, High-High-High) were associated with resilient-like patterns of psychopathology and well-being over time. Adolescents with a concordant High-High-High stress response profile showed a trend of greater reduction in depressive symptoms (B = 0.71, p = 0.052), as well as increased global self-worth (B =  0.88, p = 0.055), from T2 to T3 compared to the discordant High-High-Low profile. Concordance across multi-level stress responses may be protective and promote future resilience, whereas blunted physiological responses in the presence of high perceived and expressed stress may indicate poorer outcomes over time. |  
					| En ligne : | https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0954579423000731 |  
					| Permalink : | https://www.cra-rhone-alpes.org/cid/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=519 | 
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