The Impact of Decentering on Self-Esteem in Patients with Depression: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Schubert, Corinna
Rader, Lena
Gauggel, Siegfried
Drüke, Barbara
Abstract / Description
Depression is one of the most prevalent mental disorders. Besides low self-esteem, several associated symptoms include more negative and less positive affect, increased rumination, and reduced resource awareness. Identifying brief interventions that target these symptoms, particularly those that do not rely on external validation, is therefore of high clinical relevance. This experimental study aims to investigate whether a brief decentering intervention can improve patients‘ self-esteem, affect, rumination, and resource awareness in the short term. Additionally, the influence of depression severity on changes in self-esteem will be examined. 46 German-speaking participants (18-80 years) with diagnosed depression will be recruited. After providing sociodemographic information, participants complete state questionnaires measuring decentering, self-esteem, affect, rumination, and resource awareness. They are then randomly assigned to either a decentering group, listening to an intervention fostering non-judgmental observation of thoughts, or to an active control group, listening to a neutral audio file. Subsequently, participants complete the questionnaires again before being debriefed.
Keyword(s)
Self-esteem Decentering Affect Rumination Resources Major DepressionPersistent Identifier
PsychArchives acquisition timestamp
2025-08-15 08:31:14 UTC
Publisher
PsychArchives
Citation
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Preregistration_The Impact of Decentering.pdfAdobe PDF - 386.97KBMD5 : 838faea8beba013ec9dbd6aef42d1c1c
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There are no other versions of this object.
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Schubert, Corinna
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Rader, Lena
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Gauggel, Siegfried
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Drüke, Barbara
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PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2025-08-15T08:31:14Z
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Made available on2025-08-15T08:31:14Z
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Date of first publication2025-08-15
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Abstract / DescriptionDepression is one of the most prevalent mental disorders. Besides low self-esteem, several associated symptoms include more negative and less positive affect, increased rumination, and reduced resource awareness. Identifying brief interventions that target these symptoms, particularly those that do not rely on external validation, is therefore of high clinical relevance. This experimental study aims to investigate whether a brief decentering intervention can improve patients‘ self-esteem, affect, rumination, and resource awareness in the short term. Additionally, the influence of depression severity on changes in self-esteem will be examined. 46 German-speaking participants (18-80 years) with diagnosed depression will be recruited. After providing sociodemographic information, participants complete state questionnaires measuring decentering, self-esteem, affect, rumination, and resource awareness. They are then randomly assigned to either a decentering group, listening to an intervention fostering non-judgmental observation of thoughts, or to an active control group, listening to a neutral audio file. Subsequently, participants complete the questionnaires again before being debriefed.en
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Publication statusother
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Review statusunknown
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Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/16485
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Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.21083
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Language of contenteng
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PublisherPsychArchives
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Keyword(s)Self-esteem
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Keyword(s)Decentering
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Keyword(s)Affect
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Keyword(s)Rumination
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Keyword(s)Resources
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Keyword(s)Major Depression
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Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
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TitleThe Impact of Decentering on Self-Esteem in Patients with Depression: A Randomized Controlled Trialen
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DRO typepreregistration
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Visible tag(s)PRP-QUANT