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Dive into the research topics where Molly A. Walsh is active.

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Featured researches published by Molly A. Walsh.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2012

The association of affective temperaments with impairment and psychopathology in a young adult sample.

Molly A. Walsh; Amethyst Royal; Neus Barrantes-Vidal; Thomas R. Kwapil

BACKGROUND Previous research has examined the association of affective temperaments, as measured by the TEMPS-A, with DSM bipolar disorders. However, the relation of the TEMPS-A with risk for bipolar disorder remains unclear. The present study examined the association of affective temperaments with psychopathology, personality, and functioning in a nonclinically ascertained sample of young adults at risk for bipolar disorder. METHODS One hundred forty-five participants completed the TEMPS-A, as well as interview and questionnaire measures of psychopathology, personality, and functioning. RESULTS Cyclothymic/irritable temperament was associated with a range of deleterious outcomes, including mood disorders and impaired functioning. It was negatively associated with agreeableness and conscientiousness, and positively associated with current depressive symptoms, neuroticism, borderline symptoms, impulsivity, and grandiosity. Dysthymic temperament was positively associated with current depressive symptoms, neuroticism and agreeableness, but was unrelated to mood psychopathology. Hyperthymic temperament was associated with bipolar spectrum disorders, hypomania or interview-rated hyperthymia, extraversion, openness, impulsivity, and grandiosity. LIMITATIONS The present study was cross-sectional. Longitudinal studies utilizing the TEMPS-A are needed to better understand the predictive validity of the TEMPS-A for the development of bipolar disorder. CONCLUSIONS Early identification of individuals who fall on the bipolar spectrum may hasten appropriate intervention or monitoring, and prevent misdiagnosis. The TEMPS-A appears to be a useful tool for assessing affective temperaments and bipolar spectrum psychopathology. The results support previous research documenting the association of cyclothymic/irritable temperament with bipolar psychopathology and other negative outcomes.


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2012

Looking for bipolar spectrum psychopathology: identification and expression in daily life

Molly A. Walsh; Amethyst Royal; Leslie H. Brown; Neus Barrantes-Vidal; Thomas R. Kwapil

OBJECTIVES Current clinical and epidemiological research provides support for a continuum of bipolar psychopathology: a bipolar spectrum that ranges from subclinical manifestations to full-blown bipolar disorders. Examining subthreshold bipolar symptoms may identify individuals at risk for clinical disorders, promote early interventions and monitoring, and increase the likelihood of appropriate treatment. The present studies examined the construct validity of bipolar spectrum psychopathology using the Hypomanic Personality Scale. METHODS Study 1 used interview and questionnaire measures of bipolar spectrum psychopathology in a sample of 145 nonclinically ascertained young adults. Study 2 assessed the expression of the bipolar spectrum in daily life using experience sampling methodology in the same sample. RESULTS In study 1, Hypomanic Personality Scale scores were positively associated with clinical bipolar disorders, bipolar spectrum disorders, the presence of hypomania or hyperthymia, depressive symptoms, poor psychosocial functioning, cyclothymia, irritability, and symptoms of borderline personality disorder. In study 2, bipolar spectrum psychopathology was associated with negative affect, thought disturbance, risky behavior, and measures of grandiosity. These findings remained independent of clinical bipolar disorders. CONCLUSIONS In the present studies, bipolar-like disruptions in cognition, affect, and behavior were not limited to clinical diagnoses or mood episodes, providing further validation of the bipolar spectrum construct. The bipolar spectrum model appears to provide a conceptually richer basis for understanding and ultimately treating bipolar psychopathology than current diagnostic formulations.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2014

A three-year longitudinal study of affective temperaments and risk for psychopathology

Daniella P. DeGeorge; Molly A. Walsh; Neus Barrantes-Vidal; Thomas R. Kwapil

BACKGROUND Affective temperaments are presumed to underlie bipolar psychopathology. The TEMPS-A has been widely used to assess affective temperaments in clinical and non-clinical samples. Cross-sectional research supports the association of affective temperaments and mood psychopathology; however, longitudinal research examining risk for the development of bipolar disorders is lacking. The present study examined the predictive validity of affective temperaments, using the TEMPS-A, at a three-year follow-up assessment. METHODS The study interviewed 112 participants (77% of the original sample) at a three-year follow-up of 145 non-clinically ascertained young adults psychometrically at-risk for bipolar disorders, who previously took part in a cross-sectional examination of affective temperaments and mood psychopathology. RESULTS At the reassessment, 29 participants (26%) met criteria for bipolar spectrum disorders, including 13 participants who transitioned into disorders during the follow-up period (14% of the originally undiagnosed sample). Cyclothymic/irritable and hyperthymic temperaments predicted both total cases and new cases of bipolar spectrum disorders at the follow-up. Cyclothymic/irritable temperament was associated with more severe outcomes, including DSM-IV-TR bipolar disorders, bipolar spectrum psychopathology, major depressive episodes, and substance use disorders. Hyperthymic temperament was associated with bipolar spectrum psychopathology and hypomania, whereas dysthymic temperament was generally unassociated with psychopathology and impairment. LIMITATIONS The present sample of young adults is still young relative to the age of onset of mood psychopathology. CONCLUSIONS These results provide the first evidence of the predictive validity of affective temperaments regarding risk for the development of bipolar psychopathology. Affective temperaments provide a useful construct for understanding bipolar psychopathology.


Behavior Research Methods | 2014

Planned Missing-data Designs in Experience-sampling Research: Monte Carlo Simulations of Efficient Designs for Assessing Within-person Constructs

Paul J. Silvia; Thomas R. Kwapil; Molly A. Walsh; Inez Myin-Germeys

Experience-sampling research involves trade-offs between the number of questions asked per signal, the number of signals per day, and the number of days. By combining planned missing-data designs and multilevel latent variable modeling, we show how to reduce the items per signal without reducing the number of items. After illustrating different designs using real data, we present two Monte Carlo studies that explored the performance of planned missing-data designs across different within-person and between-person sample sizes and across different patterns of response rates. The missing-data designs yielded unbiased parameter estimates but slightly higher standard errors. With realistic sample sizes, even designs with extensive missingness performed well, so these methods are promising additions to an experience-sampler’s toolbox.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2013

Affective Temperaments: Unique Constructs or Dimensions of Normal Personality by Another Name?

Thomas R. Kwapil; Daniella P. DeGeorge; Molly A. Walsh; Christopher J. Burgin; Paul J. Silvia; Neus Barrantes-Vidal

BACKGROUND Current models theorize that affective temperaments underlie the development and expression of mood psychopathology. Recent studies support the construct validity of affective temperaments in clinical and non-clinical samples. However, one concern is that affective temperaments may be describing characteristics that are better captured by models of normal personality. We conducted two studies examining: (a) the association of affective temperaments with domains and facets of normal personality, and (b) whether affective temperaments accounted for variance in mood symptoms and disorders, impairment, and daily-life experiences over-and-above variance accounted for by normal personality. METHODS Study 1 included 522 young adults who completed the TEMPS-A and the NEO-PI-3. Study 2 included 145 participants who were administered the TEMPS-A, NEO-FFI, interviews assessing psychopathology and impairment, and an assessment of daily life experiences. RESULTS Study 1 revealed that personality domains and facets accounted for one-third to one-half of the variance in affective temperaments. However, study 2 demonstrated that affective temperaments accounted for unique variance in measures of psychopathology, impairment, and daily-life experiences after partialling variance associated with personality domains. Specifically, cyclothymic/irritable temperament predicted bipolar disorders, impairment, borderline personality traits, urgency, and anger in daily life. Hyperthymic temperament predicted hypomanic episodes, grandiosity, sensation seeking, and increased activity in daily life. LIMITATIONS The study was limited by the fact that only domain, not facet-level, measures of FFM were available in study 2. CONCLUSIONS The findings support the validity of hyperthymic and cyclothymic/irritable temperaments as indicators of clinical psychopathology and indicate that they provide information beyond normal personality.


Personality and Individual Differences | 2014

The expression of affective temperaments in daily life

Thomas R. Kwapil; Molly A. Walsh; Leslie H. Brown; Neus Barrantes-Vidal

The present study is examined the expression of affective temperaments in daily life using experience sampling methodology (ESM). 138 participants completed the TEMPS-A and were then signaled eight times daily for one week to complete questionnaires that assessed affect, cognition, behavior, sense of self, and social interaction. As expected, cyclothymic/irritable temperament was positively associated with negative affect, risky behavior, and restlessness, and was negatively associated with positive affect and preference to be with others in daily life. In contrast, hyperthymic temperament was associated with positive affect, fullness of thought, doing many and exciting things, grandiosity, and preference to be with others in daily life. Cross-level interactions indicated that cyclothymic/irritable temperament was associated with elevated stress reactivity in daily life. This was the first study to examine affective temperaments in daily life. The findings offer further validation of the TEMPS-A, as well as the maladaptive nature of the cyclothymic/irritable temperament.


Journal of Abnormal Psychology | 2015

A 3-Year longitudinal study of risk for bipolar spectrum psychopathology

Molly A. Walsh; Daniella P. DeGeorge; Neus Barrantes-Vidal; Thomas R. Kwapil


Personality and Individual Differences | 2016

Examining the multidimensional structure of impulsivity in daily life

Sarah H. Sperry; Donald R. Lynam; Molly A. Walsh; Leslie E. Horton; Thomas R. Kwapil


Personality and Individual Differences | 2013

Reinforcement Sensitivity Theory Predicts Positive and Negative Affect in Daily Life

Natalie E. Hundt; Leslie H. Brown; Nathan A. Kimbrel; Molly A. Walsh; Rosemery O. Nelson-Gray; Thomas R. Kwapil


Personality and Individual Differences | 2015

Measuring the validity and psychometric properties of a short form of the Hypomanic Personality Scale

Sarah H. Sperry; Molly A. Walsh; Thomas R. Kwapil

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Thomas R. Kwapil

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Neus Barrantes-Vidal

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Daniella P. DeGeorge

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Leslie H. Brown

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Amethyst Royal

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Paul J. Silvia

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Sarah H. Sperry

University of North Carolina at Greensboro

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Christopher J. Burgin

Tennessee Technological University

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