Journal article
Have the concepts of 'anxiety' and 'depression' been normalized or pathologized? A corpus study of historical semantic change
Y Xiao, N Baes, E Vylomova, N Haslam
Plos One | PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE | Published : 2023
Abstract
Research on concept creep indicates that the meanings of some psychological concepts have broadened in recent decades. Some mental health-related concepts such as 'trauma', for example, have acquired more expansive meanings and come to refer to a wider range of events and experiences. 'Anxiety' and 'depression' may have undergone similar semantic inflation, driven by rising public attention and awareness. Critics have argued that everyday emotional experiences are increasingly pathologized, so that 'depression' and 'anxiety' have broadened to include sub-clinical experiences of sadness and worry. The possibility that these concepts have expanded to include less severe phenomena (vertical con..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
All corpus pre-processing and data extraction used Spartan, the University of Melbourne's general purpose hybrid high performance computing system: Lafayette, L., Sauter, G., Vu, L. and Meade, B., 2016. Spartan performance and flexibility: An hpc-cloud chimera. OpenStack Summit, Barcelona, 27.