Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Benjamin G. Shapero is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Benjamin G. Shapero.


Journal of Clinical Psychology | 2009

Developmental origins of cognitive vulnerabilities to depression: review of processes contributing to stability and change across time.

Benjamin L. Hankin; Caroline W. Oppenheimer; Jessica L. Jenness; Andreas Barrocas; Benjamin G. Shapero; Jessica Goldband

Cognitive theories of depression have been shown to be potent predictors of future increases in depressive symptoms and disorder in children, adolescents, and adults. This article focuses on potential developmental origins of the main cognitive vulnerabilities, including dysfunctional attitudes, negative cognitive style, and rumination. We selectively review processes and factors that have been hypothesized to contribute to the emergence and stabilization of these cognitive risk factors. This review focuses on genetic factors, temperament, parents and peers as salient interpersonal influences, and stressful life events. We end with suggestions for future theory development and research. In particular, we emphasize the need for additional conceptual and empirical work integrating these disparate processes together into a coherent, developmental psychopathological model, and we highlight the coexistence of both stability and change in the development of cognitive vulnerabilities to depression across the lifespan.


Journal of Clinical Psychology | 2014

Stressful Life Events and Depression Symptoms: The Effect of Childhood Emotional Abuse on Stress Reactivity

Benjamin G. Shapero; Shimrit K. Black; Richard T. Liu; Joshua Klugman; Rachel E. Bender; Lyn Y. Abramson; Lauren B. Alloy

OBJECTIVE Stressful life events are associated with an increase in depressive symptoms and the onset of major depression. Importantly, research has shown that the role of stress changes over the course of depression. The present study extends the current literature by examining the effects of early life stress on emotional reactivity to current stressors. METHOD In a multiwave study (N = 281, mean age = 18.76; 68% female), we investigated the proximal changes that occur in depressive symptoms when individuals are faced with life stress and whether a history of childhood emotional abuse moderates this relationship. RESULTS Results support the stress sensitivity hypothesis for early emotional abuse history. Individuals with greater childhood emotional abuse severity experienced greater increases in depressive symptoms when confronted with current dependent stressors, controlling for childhood physical and sexual abuse. CONCLUSIONS This study highlights the importance of emotional abuse as an indicator for reactivity to stressful life events.


Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology | 2012

Cognitive vulnerabilities and depression versus other psychopathology symptoms and diagnoses in early adolescence.

Lauren B. Alloy; Shimrit K. Black; Mathew E. Young; Kim E. Goldstein; Benjamin G. Shapero; Jonathan P. Stange; Angelo S. Boccia; Lindsey M. Matt; Elaine M. Boland; Lauren C. Moore; Lyn Y. Abramson

We examined the concurrent associations between multiple cognitive vulnerabilities to depression featured in hopelessness theory, Becks theory, and response styles theory and depressive symptoms and diagnoses in a sample of early adolescents. We also examined the specificity of these cognitive vulnerabilities to depression versus anxiety and externalizing psychopathology, controlling for co-occurring symptoms and diagnoses. Male and female, Caucasian and African American, 12- to 13-year-old adolescents were assessed in a cross-sectional design. Cognitive vulnerabilities of hopelessness, inferential style, rumination, and self-referent information processing were assessed with self-reports and behavioral tasks. Symptoms and diagnoses of depressive, anxiety, and externalizing disorders were assessed with self-report questionnaires and diagnostic interviews. Hopelessness exhibited the greatest specificity to depressive symptoms and diagnoses, whereas negative inferential styles, rumination, and negative self-referent information processing were associated with both depressive and anxiety symptoms and diagnoses and, in some cases, with externalizing disorders. Consistent with cognitive theories of depression, hopelessness, negative inferential styles, rumination, and negative self-referent information processing were associated with depressive symptoms and diagnoses. However, with the exception of hopelessness, most of the remaining cognitive vulnerabilities were not specific to depression. With further maturation of our sample, these cognitive vulnerabilities may become more specific to depression as cognitive styles further develop and consolidate, the rates of depression increase, and individuals’ presentations of psychopathology become more differentiated.


Journal of Clinical Psychology | 2014

Stressful Life Events and Depression Symptoms

Benjamin G. Shapero; Shimrit K. Black; Richard T. Liu; Joshua Klugman; Rachel E. Bender; Lyn Y. Abramson; Lauren B. Alloy

OBJECTIVE Stressful life events are associated with an increase in depressive symptoms and the onset of major depression. Importantly, research has shown that the role of stress changes over the course of depression. The present study extends the current literature by examining the effects of early life stress on emotional reactivity to current stressors. METHOD In a multiwave study (N = 281, mean age = 18.76; 68% female), we investigated the proximal changes that occur in depressive symptoms when individuals are faced with life stress and whether a history of childhood emotional abuse moderates this relationship. RESULTS Results support the stress sensitivity hypothesis for early emotional abuse history. Individuals with greater childhood emotional abuse severity experienced greater increases in depressive symptoms when confronted with current dependent stressors, controlling for childhood physical and sexual abuse. CONCLUSIONS This study highlights the importance of emotional abuse as an indicator for reactivity to stressful life events.


Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology | 2013

Emotional Maltreatment, Peer Victimization, and Depressive versus Anxiety Symptoms During Adolescence: Hopelessness as a Mediator

Jessica L. Hamilton; Benjamin G. Shapero; Jonathan P. Stange; Elissa J. Hamlat; Lyn Y. Abramson; Lauren B. Alloy

Extensive comorbidity between depression and anxiety has driven research to identify unique and shared risk factors. This study prospectively examined the specificity of three interpersonal stressors (emotional abuse, emotional neglect, and relationally oriented peer victimization) as predictors of depressive versus anxiety symptoms in a racially diverse community sample of adolescents. We expanded on past research by examining hopelessness as a mediator of the relationships between these interpersonal stressors and symptoms. Participants included 225 adolescents (55% African American; 59% female; M age = 12.84 years) who completed measures at baseline (Time 1) and two follow-up assessments (Times 2 and 3). Symptoms of depression and anxiety (social, physical, total) were assessed at Time 1 and Time 3, whereas intervening emotional maltreatment, peer victimization, and hopelessness were assessed at Time 2. Hierarchical linear regressions indicated that emotional abuse was a nonspecific predictor of increases in both depressive symptoms and symptoms of social, physical, and total anxiety, whereas relationally oriented peer victimization predicted depressive symptoms specifically. Emotional neglect did not predict increases in depressive or anxiety symptoms. In addition, hopelessness mediated the relationships between emotional abuse and increases in symptoms of depression and social anxiety. These findings suggest that emotional abuse and relationally oriented peer victimization are interpersonal stressors that are relevant to the development of internalizing symptoms in adolescence and that hopelessness may be one mechanism through which emotional abuse contributes to an increased risk of depression and social anxiety.


Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry | 2014

Rumination prospectively predicts executive functioning impairments in adolescents

Samantha L. Connolly; Clara A. Wagner; Benjamin G. Shapero; Laura L. Pendergast; Lyn Y. Abramson; Lauren B. Alloy

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES The current study tested the resource allocation hypothesis, examining whether baseline rumination or depressive symptom levels prospectively predicted deficits in executive functioning in an adolescent sample. The alternative to this hypothesis was also evaluated by testing whether lower initial levels of executive functioning predicted increases in rumination or depressive symptoms at follow-up. METHODS A community sample of 200 adolescents (ages 12-13) completed measures of depressive symptoms, rumination, and executive functioning at baseline and at a follow-up session approximately 15 months later. RESULTS Adolescents with higher levels of baseline rumination displayed decreases in selective attention and attentional switching at follow-up. Rumination did not predict changes in working memory or sustained and divided attention. Depressive symptoms were not found to predict significant changes in executive functioning scores at follow-up. Baseline executive functioning was not associated with change in rumination or depression over time. CONCLUSIONS Findings partially support the resource allocation hypothesis that engaging in ruminative thoughts consumes cognitive resources that would otherwise be allocated towards difficult tests of executive functioning. Support was not found for the alternative hypothesis that lower levels of initial executive functioning would predict increased rumination or depressive symptoms at follow-up. Our study is the first to find support for the resource allocation hypothesis using a longitudinal design and an adolescent sample. Findings highlight the potentially detrimental effects of rumination on executive functioning during early adolescence.


Cognition & Emotion | 2013

Emotion regulation characteristics and cognitive vulnerabilities interact to predict depressive symptoms in individuals at risk for bipolar disorder: A prospective behavioural high-risk study

Jonathan P. Stange; Angelo S. Boccia; Benjamin G. Shapero; Ashleigh R. Molz; Megan Flynn; Lindsey M. Matt; Lyn Y. Abramson; Lauren B. Alloy

Recent work has identified behavioural approach system (BAS) sensitivity as a risk factor for the first onset and recurrence of mood episodes in bipolar disorder, but little work has evaluated risk factors for depression in individuals at risk for, but without a history of, bipolar disorder. The present study evaluated cognitive styles and the emotion-regulatory characteristics of emotional clarity and ruminative brooding as prospective predictors of depressive symptoms in individuals with high versus moderate BAS sensitivity. Three separate regressions indicated that the associations between dysfunctional attitudes, self-criticism, and neediness with prospective increases in depressive symptoms were moderated by emotional clarity and brooding. Whereas brooding interacted with these cognitive styles to exacerbate their impact on depressive symptoms, emotional clarity buffered against their negative impact. These interactions were specific to high-BAS individuals for dysfunctional attitudes, but were found across the full sample for self-criticism and neediness. These results indicate that emotion-regulatory characteristics and cognitive styles may work in conjunction to confer risk for and resilience against depression, and that some of these relationships may be specific to individuals at risk for bipolar disorder.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2013

Aggression and impulsivity as predictors of stress generation in bipolar spectrum disorders

Ashleigh R. Molz; Chelsea L. Black; Benjamin G. Shapero; Rachel E. Bender; Lauren B. Alloy; Lyn Y. Abramson

BACKGROUND Some evidence suggests that individuals with bipolar spectrum disorders (BSD) generate stressful life events, contributing to a more severe course of disorder. A recent update to the Behavioral Approach System (BAS) dysregulation theory of BSD highlights the need to investigate anger as approach motivation. Although research has shown that individuals with BSD generate stress, it is unclear whether personality traits characteristic of BSD, such as aggression and impulsivity, are related to this stress generation. METHODS The current longitudinal study employed multilevel modeling to examine stress generation in a sample of 104 individuals with BSD and 96 healthy controls. We examined rates of BAS-deactivating, BAS-activating, and Anger-evoking life events over a period of up to 4.5 years as a function of levels of aggression and impulsivity. RESULTS Individuals with BSD reported significantly higher numbers of dependent Anger-evoking events and BAS-deactivating events, but not dependent BAS-activating events, than controls. Trait levels of hostility and impulsivity predicted all types of events, although bipolar diagnosis remained a significant predictor of BAS-deactivating and Anger-evoking events. LIMITATIONS The life events measures were not designed to assess Anger-evoking events; further research should replicate these findings and develop more finely tuned assessments of stressful anger events. In addition, the sample was not a clinical sample. CONCLUSIONS This study adds to the literature on stress generation in BSD; trait level personality differences predict stress generation, beyond bipolar diagnosis. This also further establishes the importance of including anger-evoking events in the BAS model of BSDs and stress generation.


Behaviour Research and Therapy | 2012

Positive overgeneralization and Behavioral Approach System (BAS) sensitivity interact to predict prospective increases in hypomanic symptoms: A behavioral high-risk design

Jonathan P. Stange; Ashleigh R. Molz; Chelsea L. Black; Benjamin G. Shapero; Joanna M. Bacelli; Lyn Y. Abramson; Lauren B. Alloy

Recent work has identified Behavioral Approach System (BAS) sensitivity as a risk factor for the first onset and recurrence of mood episodes in bipolar disorder, but little work has evaluated risk factors for the prospective development of hypomanic symptoms in individuals at risk for, but without a history of, bipolar disorder. The present study used a prospective behavioral high-risk design to evaluate the impact of positive overgeneralization, a cognitive correlate of risk for hypomania, on hypomanic symptoms in individuals with high vs. moderate BAS sensitivity, but without a history of mood elevation. Hierarchical linear regressions indicated that upward positive overgeneralization and BAS sensitivity interacted to predict increased levels of hypomanic symptoms at follow-up, controlling for initial hypomanic symptoms. The pattern of this interaction was such that positive overgeneralization predicted higher levels of hypomanic symptoms among high-BAS, but not moderate-BAS, individuals. Thus, the self-reported tendency to experience grandiose increases in confidence following success may confer additional risk for mood elevation among individuals already at risk for developing bipolar disorder. Potential implications for prevention and treatment are discussed.


Journal of Early Adolescence | 2015

Pubertal timing, peer victimization, and body esteem differentially predict depressive symptoms in African American and Caucasian girls

Elissa J. Hamlat; Benjamin G. Shapero; Jessica L. Hamilton; Jonathan P. Stange; Lyn Y. Abramson; Lauren B. Alloy

This study prospectively examined pubertal timing and peer victimization as interactive predictors of depressive symptoms in a racially diverse community sample of adolescents. We also expanded on past research by assessing body esteem as a mechanism by which pubertal timing and peer victimization confer risk for depression. In all, 218 adolescents (53.4% female, 49.3% African American, 50.7% Caucasian) completed both a baseline assessment and a follow-up assessment approximately 8 months later. Early maturing Caucasian girls and late maturing African American girls experienced the greatest increases in depressive symptoms at follow-up if they experienced higher levels of peer victimization between baseline and follow-up. Furthermore, body esteem significantly mediated the relationship between pubertal timing, peer victimization, and depressive symptoms for girls of both races. The interaction of pubertal timing and peer victimization did not predict depressive symptoms for boys of either race. These results support body esteem as a mechanism that contributes to increased depression among girls in adolescence—despite a differential impact of pubertal timing for Caucasian and African American girls.

Collaboration


Dive into the Benjamin G. Shapero's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lyn Y. Abramson

University of Wisconsin-Madison

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jonathan P. Stange

University of Illinois at Chicago

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge