First-person Pronoun Use in Spoken Language as a Predictor of Future Depressive Symptoms: Preliminary Evidence from a Clinical Sample of Depressed Patients.
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Change in self-esteem predicts depressive symptoms at follow-up after intensive multimodal psychotherapy for major depression.Language Patterns Discriminate Mild Depression From Normal Sadness and Euthymic State.Facebook language predicts depression in medical recordsDo Patients With Depression Prefer Literal or Metaphorical Expressions for Internal States? Evidence From Sentence Completion and Elicited Production
P2860
First-person Pronoun Use in Spoken Language as a Predictor of Future Depressive Symptoms: Preliminary Evidence from a Clinical Sample of Depressed Patients.
description
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name
First-person Pronoun Use in Sp ...... Sample of Depressed Patients.
@en
type
label
First-person Pronoun Use in Sp ...... Sample of Depressed Patients.
@en
prefLabel
First-person Pronoun Use in Sp ...... Sample of Depressed Patients.
@en
P2093
P2860
P356
P1476
First-person Pronoun Use in Sp ...... Sample of Depressed Patients.
@en
P2093
Henning Schauenburg
Markus Wolf
Matthias Hunn
P2860
P304
P356
10.1002/CPP.2006
P577
2016-01-27T00:00:00Z