Characteristics of Depression (AQA A Level Psychology)

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Claire Neeson

Written by: Claire Neeson

Reviewed by: Lucy Vinson

Characteristics of depression

  • Depression is a mood disorder (also known as an affective disorder) characterised by low mood, lack of energy and motivation and loss of interest in activities that were once pleasurable

  • Symptoms of depression must have been present for no less than two weeks for a diagnosis to be determined

  • The DSM-5 includes the following categories of depressive disorders:

    • Major depressive disorder: severe but often short-term depression 

    • Disruptive mood dysregulation disorder: childhood tantrums 

    • Persistent depressive disorder: long-term, recurring depression, including sustained major depression 

    • Premenstrual dysphoric disorder: disruption of mood before and/or during menstruation 

Behavioural characteristics of depression

  • A shift in activity levels: either an increase in activity such as restlessness, or a decrease seen via withdrawal from daily life e.g. not going to work

  • Affected sleep: either an increase in time spent sleeping/in bed or a decrease seen via insomnia or waking very early

  • Affected appetite: either an increase in food consumption or, a decrease seen via an inability to eat/lack of appetite

  • Aggression and self-harm: the depressed person may become aggressive towards others and/or self-harm seen via cutting themselves possibly culminating in suicidal behaviours

Emotional characteristics of depression

  • Sadness: a consistently low mood is the key defining emotion of depression and may bring with it feelings of hopelessness

  • Anger: there may be angry outbursts and unpredictable mood swings

  • Loss of interest: the depressed person may lose all interest in activities or hobbies that once brought them joy, which in turn can lead to increased sadness

  • Low self-esteem: this may involve self-loathing which is likely to exacerbate sadness and feelings of hopelessness

Cognitive characteristics of depression

  • Negative view of the world: thoughts that everything will turn out badly and that there is no hope 

  • Irrational thoughts: thoughts which do not accurately reflect reality but instead mirror the negative mindset of the depressed person

  • Poor concentration: concentration may be disturbed so that there is the inability to focus on one specific task

  • Inability to make decisions: the depressed person appears almost 'paralysed' with indecision, seemingly unable to commit themselves to one course of action

  • Catastrophising: an 'end-of-the-world' mindset in which even the smallest setback is viewed as a tragedy or emergency

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Claire Neeson

Author: Claire Neeson

Expertise: Psychology Content Creator

Claire has been teaching for 34 years, in the UK and overseas. She has taught GCSE, A-level and IB Psychology which has been a lot of fun and extremely exhausting! Claire is now a freelance Psychology teacher and content creator, producing textbooks, revision notes and (hopefully) exciting and interactive teaching materials for use in the classroom and for exam prep. Her passion (apart from Psychology of course) is roller skating and when she is not working (or watching 'Coronation Street') she can be found busting some impressive moves on her local roller rink.

Lucy Vinson

Author: Lucy Vinson

Expertise: Psychology Subject Lead

Lucy has been a part of Save My Exams since 2024 and is responsible for all things Psychology & Social Science in her role as Subject Lead. Prior to this, Lucy taught for 5 years, including Computing (KS3), Geography (KS3 & GCSE) and Psychology A Level as a Subject Lead for 4 years. She loves teaching research methods and psychopathology. Outside of the classroom, she has provided pastoral support for hundreds of boarding students over a four year period as a boarding house tutor.