17th International Conference on Neurology and Spine Disorders
  • Follow

Accepted Abstracts

The Mediating Role of Perceived Control and Desire for Control in the Relationship between Personality and Depressive Symptomology

Liam Myles1*, Jason Connolly1 and Natalia Stanulewicz2
1 Department of Psychology, Durham University, UK
2 School of Applied Social Sciences, De Montfort University, UK

Citation: Myles L, Connolly J, Stanulewicz N (2021) The Mediating Role of Perceived Control and Desire for Control in the Relationship between Personality and Depressive Symptomology. SciTech Central Neurology 2021. 

Received: March 12, 2021         Accepted: March 13, 2021         Published: March 13, 2021

Abstract

Introduction: Depression constitutes a fundamental problem for society and understanding its aetiology is of unequivocal importance. Seminal theories implicated low perceived control, low desire for control and variations in personality factors in the manifestation of depression. This study, however, is the first to examine the mediating roles of both desire for control and perceived control in the relationship between personality and depressive symptomology.
Methods: A sample of 350 participants, ranging from 18 to 67 years of age (M = 22.8, SD = 9.0), were recruited through Durham University’s social media pages. Participants completed the Revised NEO Personality Inventory, sthe Spheres of Control Scale, the Desire for Control Scale and Beck’s Depression Inventory.
Results: Path analysis using Maximum-Likelihood Method indicated that desire for control and perceived control serially mediated the effect of extraversion, conscientiousness and agreeableness on depressive symptomology, with only neuroticism maintaining a direct effect. Extraversion and conscientiousness increaseddesire for control, whereas agreeableness diminished desire for control. Greater desire for control subsequently elevated perceived control, manifesting reductions in depressive symptomology.
Discussion: This study provides novel evidence that desire for control and perceived controlmediate the relationship between personality and depressive symptoms. The clinical implications are discussed, evaluating the potential efficacy of therapies that bolster desire for control. Specifically, these results have implications for approaches to care across all health care settings, such as spine diseases, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease and recovery from neurosurgery.
Keywords: Depressive symptomology, Perceived control, Desire for control, Personality

Supporters