Figure 3
Commonality analyses for Hypothesis 2A involving rumination, worry, depression symptoms, and anxiety symptoms. Values inside each section of the diagram display the percent variation in repetitive negative thinking (HINT) that can be explained by each section. For example, the value furthest to the top left represents the variation in repetitive negative thinking uniquely explained by rumination (RRS), while the center-most value represents variation explained by variation shared with rumination, worry, depression, and anxiety. Two values are not shown in this model: the variation explained by the overlap between rumination and anxiety only (.000, CI [0.0%, 0.5%]) and the variation explained by the overlap between worry and depression only (.022, CI [1.1%, 3.5%]). The predictions displayed in Figure 1B are recreated on top for reference.

Commonality analyses for Hypothesis 2A involving rumination, worry, depression symptoms, and anxiety symptoms. Values inside each section of the diagram display the percent variation in repetitive negative thinking (HINT) that can be explained by each section. For example, the value furthest to the top left represents the variation in repetitive negative thinking uniquely explained by rumination (RRS), while the center-most value represents variation explained by variation shared with rumination, worry, depression, and anxiety. Two values are not shown in this model: the variation explained by the overlap between rumination and anxiety only (.000, CI [0.0%, 0.5%]) and the variation explained by the overlap between worry and depression only (.022, CI [1.1%, 3.5%]). The predictions displayed in Figure 1B are recreated on top for reference.

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