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      Everyday emotion word and personal pronoun use reflects dyadic adjustment among couples coping with breast cancer : Word use and dyadic adjustment in couples coping

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      Personal Relationships
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Language use of depressed and depression-vulnerable college students

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            Sex differences in self-disclosure: a meta-analysis.

            A meta-analysis of 205 studies involving 23,702 Ss was conducted to determine whether there are sex differences in self-disclosure. Across these studies, women disclosed slightly more than men (d = .18). This effect size was not homogeneous across studies. Several moderator variables were found. Sex of target and the interaction effect of relationship to target and measure of self-disclosure moderated the effect of sex on self-disclosure. Sex differences in self-disclosure were significantly greater to female and same-sex partners than to opposite-sex or male partners. When the target had a relationship with the discloser (i.e., friend, parent, or spouse), women disclosed more than men regardless of whether self-disclosure was measured by self-report or observation. When the target was a stranger, men reported that they disclosed similarly to women; however, studies using observational measures of self-disclosure found that women disclosed more than men.
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              Linguistic predictors of adaptive bereavement.

              The words people use in disclosing a trauma were hypothesized to predict improvements in mental and physical health in 2 studies. The first study reanalyzed data from 6 previous experiments in which language variables served as predictors of health. Results from 177 participants in previous writing studies showed that increased use of words associated with insightful and causal thinking was linked to improved physical but not mental health. Higher use of positive relative to negative emotion words was also associated with better health. An empirical measure that was derived from these data correlated with subsequent distress ratings. The second study tested these models on interview transcripts of 30 men who had lost their partners to AIDS. Cognitive change and empirical models predicted postbereavement distress at 1 year. Implications of using computer-based text analyses in the study of narratives are discussed.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Personal Relationships
                Pers Relationship
                Wiley-Blackwell
                13504126
                March 2017
                March 24 2017
                : 24
                : 1
                : 36-48
                Article
                10.1111/pere.12165
                b6ca563d-356e-4305-8b8a-2448a66c8584
                © 2017

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1

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