AUTHOR=Zheng Mufan , Ma Ziran , He Jin TITLE=The impact of adolescent clinical depression and depressive symptoms on moral thinking: based on process dissociation approach JOURNAL=Frontiers in Psychology VOLUME=Volume 16 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1519595 DOI=10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1519595 ISSN=1664-1078 ABSTRACT=BackgroundAdolescence is a critical period for moral development, and depression significantly impacts this process by altering cognitive and emotional processing, affecting the resolution of moral dilemmas. Rumination, closely linked to depression, also influences emotional and cognitive processing during moral judgments.MethodsStudy 1 examined 34 depressed adolescents and 36 healthy controls who completed the Beck Depression Inventory-Short Form and Beck Anxiety Inventory, followed by 20 moral dilemmas from the Process Dissociation (PD) procedure. Study 2 (n = 568) explored subclinical depressive symptoms and their antecedent role of rumination on moral judgments. The SCL-90 scale measured depression, paranoid ideation, and hostility, while the Positive and Negative Rumination scales assessed rumination levels.ResultsClinically depressed adolescents showed significantly reduced reliance on both utilitarian [t(65) = −3.90, p < 0.001, Cohen’s d = 0.95, 95%CI(−0.18, −0.06)] and deontological tendencies [t(65) = −3.03, p = 0.004, Cohen’s d = 0.74, 95%CI (−0.25, −0.05)], compared to control group. Subclinical depressive symptoms predicted lower deontological tendencies [β = −0.13, t(566) = −3.09, p = 0.02, 95%CI (−0.05, −0.01)]. Sequential mediation analyses revealed: (a) Negative rumination → depression → paranoid ideation → deontological decline [Indirect effect: b = −0.003, 95%CI (−0.005, −0.001)]; (b) Negative rumination → depression → hostility → deontological decline [Indirect effect: b = −0.003, 95%CI (−0.005, −0.0004)]. Negative rumination exacerbated depressive symptoms, which sequentially increased paranoid ideation and hostility, ultimately lowering deontological judgments.ConclusionClinical depression decreases deontological and utilitarian moral reasoning, while negative rumination exacerbated depressive symptoms, which sequentially increased paranoid ideation and hostility, ultimately lowering deontological judgments. These findings highlight depression’s nuanced impact on adolescent moral development and underscore transdiagnostic mechanisms requiring targeted intervention.