Proneness to shame, proneness to guilt, and psychopathology.

J P Tangney, P Wagner, R Gramzow
Author Information
  1. J P Tangney: Department of Psychology, George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia 22030.

Abstract

The links between shame and guilt and psychopathology were examined. In 2 studies, 245 and 234 undergraduates completed the Self-Conscious Affect and Attribution Inventory, the Symptom Checklist 90, the Beck Depression Inventory, the State-Trait Anxiety Scale, and the Attributional Style Questionnaire. Results failed to support Lewis's (1971) notion that shame and guilt are differentially related to unique symptom clusters. Shame-proneness was strongly related to psychological maladjustment in general. Guilt-proneness was only moderately related to psychopathology; correlations were ascribable entirely to the shared variance between shame and guilt. Although clearly related to a depressogenic attributional style, shame accounted for substantial variance in depression, above and beyond attributional style.

Grants

  1. IR15HD25506/NICHD NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adult
Anxiety
Depression
Female
Guilt
Humans
Male
Personality Inventory
Risk Factors
Shame

Word Cloud

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