Data

Upward Counterfactual Thinking and Depression Meta-analysis

University of New England, Australia
Broomhall, Anne ; Phillips, Wendy ; Hine, Donald ; Loi, Natasha
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.25952/647n-n454&rft.title=Upward Counterfactual Thinking and Depression Meta-analysis&rft.identifier=10.25952/647n-n454&rft.publisher=University of New England&rft.description=This dataset contains the summary of effect sizes obtained from 36 publications that investigated the association between upward counterfactual thinking and depression. The effect sizes were categorised according to study characteristics that served as moderators of the association: investigated counterfactuals (i.e., upward counterfactuals or regret), theme of the negative event, sample type, study design, depression assessment, and counterfactual assessment types. Other descriptions of the studies were also included. This meta-analysis served as a precursor for conducting studies about counterfactual-related depression in Philippine respondents given the paucity of studies about this topic in non-Western or Asian societies.&rft.creator=Broomhall, Anne &rft.creator=Phillips, Wendy &rft.creator=Hine, Donald &rft.creator=Loi, Natasha &rft.date=2020&rft_rights=Rights holder: Anne Gene Broomhall&rft_subject=Mental Health&rft_subject=MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES&rft_subject=PUBLIC HEALTH AND HEALTH SERVICES&rft_subject=Mental Health&rft_subject=HEALTH&rft_subject=PUBLIC HEALTH (EXCL. SPECIFIC POPULATION HEALTH)&rft_subject=Mental health services&rft_subject=Health services and systems&rft_subject=HEALTH SCIENCES&rft_subject=Mental health&rft_subject=Public health (excl. specific population health)&rft_subject=HEALTH&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Rights holder: Anne Gene Broomhall

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annegenebroomhall@gmail.com

Full description

This dataset contains the summary of effect sizes obtained from 36 publications that investigated the association between upward counterfactual thinking and depression. The effect sizes were categorised according to study characteristics that served as moderators of the association: investigated counterfactuals (i.e., upward counterfactuals or regret), theme of the negative event, sample type, study design, depression assessment, and counterfactual assessment types. Other descriptions of the studies were also included. This meta-analysis served as a precursor for conducting studies about counterfactual-related depression in Philippine respondents given the paucity of studies about this topic in non-Western or Asian societies.

Issued: 2020-06-16

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