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Dive into the research topics where Carlos Tilghman-Osborne is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlos Tilghman-Osborne.


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2008

Emergence of attributional style and its relation to depressive symptoms.

David A. Cole; Jeffrey A. Ciesla; Danielle H. Dallaire; Farrah Jacquez; Ashley Q. Pineda; Beth LaGrange; Alanna E. Truss; Amy S. Folmer; Carlos Tilghman-Osborne; Julia W. Felton

The development of depressive attributional style (AS) and its role as a cognitive diathesis for depression were examined in children and adolescents (Grades 2-9). In a 4-wave longitudinal study of 3 overlapping age cohorts, AS, negative life events, and depressive symptoms were evaluated every 12 months. Consistency of childrens attributions across situations was moderately high at all ages. The cross-sectional structure of AS changed with age, as stability became a more salient aspect of AS than internality and globality. The structure of AS also changed, becoming more traitlike as children grew older. In longitudinal analyses, evidence of a Cognitive Diathesis x Stress interaction did not emerge until Grades 8 and 9, suggesting that AS may not serve as a diathesis for depression at younger ages. Results suggest that attributional models of depression may require modification before they are applied across developmental levels.


Clinical Psychology Review | 2010

Definition and measurement of guilt: Implications for clinical research and practice

Carlos Tilghman-Osborne; David A. Cole; Julia W. Felton

Research on the relation of guilt to psychopathology is highly inconsistent. Some studies suggest that guilt contributes to psychopathology; others suggest that guilt serves a protective role. This review of 23 theory-based definitions of guilt and 25 measures of guilt suggests that a lack of conceptual clarity may be to blame. Measures of guilt do not correspond well to the definitions from which they derive. Many definitions and measures reflect the intrusion of extraneous constructs that could confound guilt research. Furthermore, definitions and measures of guilt change with developmental level. Nevertheless, two broad conceptualizations of guilt emerge. Central to both is a focus on ones action or inactions involving real or imagined moral transgressions. Distinguishing the two conceptualizations is whether or not guilt is inherently adaptive construct, generating remorse, augmenting a sense of responsibility, and motivating reparation. Recommendations for the definition and measurement of guilt are discussed.


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2013

Does supportive parenting mitigate the longitudinal effects of peer victimization on depressive thoughts and symptoms in children

Sarah A. Bilsky; David A. Cole; Tammy L. Dukewich; Nina C. Martin; Keneisha R. Sinclair; Cong V. Tran; Kathryn Roeder; Julia W. Felton; Carlos Tilghman-Osborne; Amy Weitlauf; Melissa A. Maxwell

Cohen and Wills (Cohen, S., & Wills, T. A., 1985, Stress, social support, and the buffering hypothesis. Psychological Bulletin, 98, 310-357) described two broad models whereby social support could mitigate the deleterious effects of stress on health: a main effect model and stress-buffering model. A specific application of these models was tested in a three-wave, multimethod study of 1888 children to assess ways parental support (social support) mitigates the effects of peer victimization (stress) on childrens depressive symptoms and depression-related cognitions (health-related outcomes). Results revealed that (a) both supportive parenting and peer victimization had main effects on depressive symptoms and cognitions; (b) supportive parenting and peer victimization did not interact in the prediction of depressive thoughts and symptoms; (c) these results generalized across age and gender; and (d) increases in depressive symptoms were related to later reduction of supportive parenting and later increase in peer victimization. Although supportive parenting did not moderate the adverse outcomes associated with peer victimization, results show that its main effect can counterbalance or offset these effects to some degree. Implications for practice and future research are discussed.


Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology | 2012

Impact of Physical and Relational Peer Victimization on Depressive Cognitions in Children and Adolescents

Keneisha R. Sinclair; David A. Cole; Tammy L. Dukewich; Julia W. Felton; Amy Weitlauf; Melissa A. Maxwell; Carlos Tilghman-Osborne; Amy Jacky

The purpose of this study is to find longitudinal evidence of the effect of targeted peer victimization (TPV) on depressive cognitions as a function of victimization type and gender. Prospective relations of physical and relational peer victimization to positive and negative self-cognitions were examined in a 1-year, 2-wave longitudinal study. Self-reports of cognitions and both peer nomination and self-report measures of peer victimization experiences were obtained from 478 predominantly Caucasian children and young adolescents (Grades 3–6 at the beginning of the study) evenly split between genders. As a result, (a) peer victimization predicted increases in negative cognitions and decreases in positive cognitions over time; (b) relational victimization was more consistently related to changes in depressive cognitions than was physical victimization; (c) the prospective relation between victimization and depressive cognitions was stronger for boys than for girls; and (d) when the overlap between relational and physical TPV was statistically controlled, girls experienced more relational TPV than did boys, and boys experienced more physical TPV than did girls. Peer victimization, particularly relational TPV, has a significant impact on childrens depressive cognitions. This relation seems particularly true for boys. Implications for future research, clinical work with victimized youth at risk for depression, and school policy to help both victims and bullies are discussed.


Journal of Clinical Psychology | 2009

Gender differences in the longitudinal structure of cognitive diatheses for depression in children and adolescents.

David A. Cole; Farrah Jacquez; Alanna E. Truss; Ashley Q. Pineda; Amy Weitlauf; Carlos Tilghman-Osborne; Julia W. Felton; Melissa A. Maxwell

In a school-based, four-wave, longitudinal study, children (grades 4-7) and young adolescents (grades 6-9) completed questionnaires measuring depressive symptoms and depressive cognitions, including positive and negative cognitions on the Cognitive Triad Inventory for Children (CTI-C; Kaslow, Stark, Printz, Livingston, & Tsai, 1992) and self-perceived competence on the Self-Perception Profile for Children (SPPC; Harter, 1985). Application of the Trait-State-Occasion model (Cole, Martin, & Steiger, 2005) revealed the existence of a time-invariant trait factor and a set of time-varying occasion factors. Gender differences emerged, indicating that some cognitive diatheses were more trait-like for girls than for boys (i.e., positive and negative cognitions on the CTI-C; self-perceived physical appearance and global self-worth on the SPPC). Implications focus on the emergent gender difference in depression, the design of longitudinal studies, and clinical decisions about the implementation of prevention versus intervention programs.


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2011

Disentangling the prospective relations between maladaptive cognitions and depressive symptoms

Beth LaGrange; David A. Cole; Farrah Jacquez; Jeff A. Ciesla; Danielle H. Dallaire; Ashley Q. Pineda; Alanna E. Truss; Amy Weitlauf; Carlos Tilghman-Osborne; Julia W. Felton

In a four-wave, cohort-longitudinal design with a community sample of 515 children and adolescents (grades 2 through 9), this study examined the longitudinal structure of and prospective interrelations between maladaptive cognitions and depressive symptoms. Multigroup structural equation modeling generated four major findings. First, the longitudinal structures of maladaptive cognitions and depressive symptoms consist of a single time-invariant factor and a series of time-varying factors. Second, evidence supported a model in which depressive symptoms predicted negative cognitions but not the reverse. Third, the time-invariant components of cognition and depression were highly correlated. Fourth, the strength of the depression-to-cognition relation increased with age. Implications regarding the mechanisms underlying clinical interventions with depressed children are discussed.


Journal of Early Adolescence | 2011

A Longitudinal Study of Cognitive Risks for Depressive Symptoms in Children and Young Adolescents.

David A. Cole; Farrah Jacquez; Beth LaGrange; Ashley Q. Pineda; Alanna E. Truss; Amy Weitlauf; Carlos Tilghman-Osborne; Julia W. Felton; Judy Garber; Danielle H. Dallaire; Jeff A. Ciesla; Melissa A. Maxwell; Lynette M. Dufton

Youths with high (N = 52) or low cognitive vulnerability (N = 48) for depression were selected from a larger sample (N = 515) of students (7-10 years old), based on their attributional style (AS), negative cognitions (NC), and/or self-competence (SC). Long-term effects of cognitive vulnerabilities on depressive symptoms were examined in a 3-year, three-wave, multi-informant, longitudinal design. Three findings emerged. First, some empirical overlap exists among these three types of cognitive diatheses, especially between NC and SC. Second, the combination of AS, NC, and SC had a significant (but diminishing) relationship to depressive symptoms at 6, 18, and 30 months, primarily due to NC and SC, not AS. Third, interactions between cognitive risk and life events were not significant, suggesting an additive type of diathesis-stress model for depression in young adolescents.


Development and Psychopathology | 2014

Sensitive periods for the effect of peer victimization on self-cognition: Moderation by age and gender

Kathryn Roeder; David A. Cole; Keneisha R. Sinclair; Tammy L. Dukewich; Kristopher J. Preacher; Julia W. Felton; Amy Jacky; Carlos Tilghman-Osborne

The link between the experience of peer victimization (PV) and future psychological maladjustment has been consistently documented; however, little is known about intermediary cognitive processes that underlie this relation or how these processes vary across childhood. The present study examined the prospective relations between physical and relational PV and the development of negative and positive automatic thoughts and self-cognitions. Self-reports of cognitions and peer nomination measures of victimization were obtained from 1,242 children and young adolescents (Grades 3 through 6) in a two-wave longitudinal study. The results revealed that PV predicted significant increases in negative views of the self, world, and future and decreases in self-perceived competence for girls under 11 years of age, with the effect being stronger for younger girls. PV was not significantly associated with changes in positive or negative self-cognitions for older girls or for boys of any age. These findings support the hypothesis that PV may be linked to future psychopathology through its influence on self-cognitions, but only for girls.


Development and Psychopathology | 2010

The relation of weight change to depressive symptoms in adolescence

Julia W. Felton; David A. Cole; Carlos Tilghman-Osborne; Melissa A. Maxwell

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders lists weight gain or weight loss as a symptom of depression at all ages, but no study of adolescent depression has examined its relation to actual (not just self-reported) weight change. In the current longitudinal study, 215 adolescents provided physical and self-report measures of change in weight, body mass, and body fat over a 4-month time interval. They also completed psychological measures of body dissatisfaction, problematic eating attitudes, and depressive symptoms. The relation between physical measures of weight change and depressive symptoms varied with age. These relations were explained by individual differences in body dissatisfaction, eating attitudes, and behaviors, leading to questions about weight change as a symptom of depression in adolescence.


Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology | 2008

RELATION OF GUILT, SHAME, BEHAVIORAL AND CHARACTEROLOGICAL SELF-BLAME TO DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS IN ADOLESCENTS OVER TIME.

Carlos Tilghman-Osborne; David A. Cole; Julia W. Felton; Jeffrey A. Ciesla

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Farrah Jacquez

University of Cincinnati

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