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Featured researches published by Elissa J. Hamlat.


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 Adolescence | 2014

Pubertal timing and vulnerabilities to depression in early adolescence: differential pathways to depressive symptoms by sex.

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

Although research implicates pubertal processes in the emergence of the sex difference in depression during adolescence, few studies have examined how cognitive and affective vulnerabilities influence the effect of pubertal timing on depressive symptoms. The current study prospectively examined whether early pubertal timing predicted increases in depressive symptoms among adolescents with more negative cognitive styles and lower emotional clarity, and whether this risk was specific to adolescent girls. In a diverse sample of 318 adolescents, early pubertal timing predicted increases in depressive symptoms among adolescent boys and girls with more negative cognitive styles and adolescent girls with poor emotional clarity. These findings suggest that earlier pubertal maturation may heighten the risk of depression for adolescents with pre-existing vulnerabilities to depression, and that early maturing adolescent girls with lower levels of emotional clarity may be particularly vulnerable to depressive symptoms, representing one pathway through which the sex difference in depression may emerge.


Journal of Adolescence | 2013

Overgeneral Autobiographical Memory, Emotional Maltreatment, and Depressive Symptoms in Adolescence: Evidence of a Cognitive Vulnerability-Stress Interaction.

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

Overgeneral autobiographical memory (OGM) is associated with depression and may confer risk for the development of depressed mood, but few longitudinal studies have evaluated OGM as a predictor of depressive symptoms in early adolescence, particularly in the context of environmental stressors. We investigated whether OGM and emotional maltreatment would interact to predict prospective increases in depressive symptoms in early adolescents and whether these effects differed by race. Among 174 seventh-graders, OGM and familial emotional abuse interacted to predict depressive symptoms eight months later, controlling for initial depressive symptoms. Specifically, emotional abuse predicted increases in depressive symptoms among Caucasian adolescents with more OGM, but not among those with less OGM. This association was not significant for African American adolescents. These results provide support for a cognitive vulnerability-stress relationship between OGM and emotional abuse in early adolescence and suggest that these mechanisms of risk for depression may be specific to Caucasian adolescents.


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.


Clinical psychological science | 2016

Pubertal Development, Emotion Regulatory Styles, and the Emergence of Sex Differences in Internalizing Disorders and Symptoms in Adolescence

Lauren B. Alloy; Jessica L. Hamilton; Elissa J. Hamlat; Lyn Y. Abramson

Adolescence marks the emergence of sex differences in internalizing symptoms and disorders, with girls at increased risk for depression and anxiety during the pubertal transition. However, the mechanisms through which puberty confers risk for internalizing psychopathology for girls, but not boys, remain unclear. We examined two pubertal indicators (pubertal status and timing) as predictors of the development of emotion regulation styles (rumination and emotional clarity) and depressive and anxiety symptoms and disorders in a three-wave study of 314 adolescents. Path analyses indicated that early pubertal timing, but not pubertal status, predicted increased rumination, but not decreased emotional clarity, in adolescent girls, but not boys. Additionally, rumination mediated the association between early pubertal timing and increased depressive, but not anxiety, symptoms and disorder onset among adolescent girls. These findings suggest that the sex difference in depression may result partly from early maturing girls’ greater tendency to develop ruminative styles than boys.


Cognitive and Behavioral Practice | 2016

Assessment and Treatment of Bipolar Spectrum Disorders in Emerging Adulthood: Applying the Behavioral Approach System Hypersensitivity Model

Elissa J. Hamlat; Jared K. O'Garro-Moore; Lauren B. Alloy; Robin Nusslock

Bipolar disorder is associated with a host of negative physical and interpersonal outcomes including suicide. Emerging adulthood is an age of risk for the onset of bipolar spectrum disorders (BSD) and there has been increased effort to focus on early identification and subsequent intervention for BSDs during this developmental period. Recent research on the behavioral approach system (BAS) hypersensitivity model of bipolar disorder may have implications for the assessment and treatment of BSD in emerging adulthood. We summarize relevant findings on the BAS hypersensitivity model that support the use of reward sensitivity in the early identification of BSDs and suggest evidence-based strategies for clinical work with emerging adults with bipolar spectrum disorders.


Practice Innovations | 2018

Autobiographical memory as a target of intervention: Increasing specificity for therapeutic gain.

Elissa J. Hamlat; Lauren B. Alloy

Substantial evidence supports that the level of specificity of autobiographical memories affects the onset and course of depression and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Furthermore, the modification of the specificity of autobiographical memories may serve as an effective alternative or adjunct to currently available interventions for psychological disorders. Research conducted with interventions that target autobiographical memory, including life review therapy and memory specificity training, is reviewed. Potential mechanisms (e.g., rumination, problem-solving) of memory specificity interventions and future extensions to existing research are also evaluated.


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2015

Rumination and overgeneral autobiographical memory in adolescents: an integration of cognitive vulnerabilities to depression

Elissa J. Hamlat; Samantha L. Connolly; Jessica L. Hamilton; Jonathan P. Stange; Lyn Y. Abramson; Lauren B. Alloy


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2014

Cognitive Vulnerabilities Amplify the Effect of Early Pubertal Timing on Interpersonal Stress Generation During Adolescence

Jessica L. Hamilton; Jonathan P. Stange; Evan M. Kleiman; Elissa J. Hamlat; Lyn Y. Abramson; Lauren B. Alloy


Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology | 2014

Early Pubertal Timing as a Vulnerability to Depression Symptoms: Differential Effects of Race and Sex

Elissa J. Hamlat; Jonathan P. Stange; Lyn Y. Abramson; Lauren B. Alloy

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Jonathan P. Stange

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Lyn Y. Abramson

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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