A four-wave survey to test the relative importance of schemas and metacognitive beliefs as within-person correlates of depressive symptoms
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Abstract
Understanding theorized psychological mechanisms underlying depressive
symptoms at the within-person level can have direct implications for how depression is
formulated and targeted in therapy. The cognitive model of depression postulates schemas
as central mechanisms in depression, while the metacognitive model challenges this and
emphasize dysfunctional metacognitive beliefs. Previous research has investigated the
relative importance of these different belief domains in depression but have in large relied
on cross-sectional data or focused on between-person prospective relationships. We
aimed to evaluate the relative contribution of schemas versus metacognitive beliefs to
depressive symptoms at the within-person level over a four-wave survey period (with 4-
week intervals) in a sample of 526 individuals. Our results showed that change in positive
metacognitive beliefs and negative metacognitive beliefs about the uncontrollability of
rumination, but not change in schemas, were the unique factors associated with changes
in depressive symptoms over time. Moreover, change in negative metacognitive beliefs
about the social consequences of rumination was significantly associated with change in
schemas above and beyond the change in depressive symptoms. Our findings suggest a
more relevant contribution of metacognitive beliefs than schemas to depressive symptoms
at the within-person level. Clinical implications and future directions are discussed,
stressing the importance of replicating these findings in clinical samples.
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Julia B. Cano-López, Henrik Nordahl, Esperanza García-Sancho, Frederick Anyan, José M. Salguero, A four-wave survey to test the relative importance of schemas and metacognitive beliefs as within-person correlates of depressive symptoms, Journal of sychiatric Research, Volume 192, 2026, Pages 271-279, ISSN 0022-3956, https://doi.org/10.1016/ j.jpsychires.2025.10.038.
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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Atribución-NoComercial 4.0 Internacional










