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Topological analysis of the depression-anxiety-stress network in vocational college freshmen: A longitudinal trace-based analysis

Siliang Yang1,2,*, Mengying Xu2
1 School of Educational Science, Anhui Normal University, Wuhu, China
2 Pre-School Education Department, Tongcheng Teachers College, Tongcheng, China
* Corresponding Author: Siliang Yang. Email: email

Journal of Psychology in Africa https://doi.org/10.32604/jpa.2026.070171

Received 09 July 2025; Accepted 06 January 2026; Published online 04 February 2026

Abstract

This study explores the core characteristics, dynamic progression of the depression-anxiety-stress network among Chinese higher vocational college freshmen and its association with life satisfaction, and identifies key nodes and critical intervention points. Participants were 295 higher vocational college freshmen (male = 137; M = 18.52, SD = 0.69) completing two follow-up surveys (5-month interval). Measures included depression-anxiety-stress symptoms and life satisfaction, analyzed via cross-sectional and binary cross-lagged panel network analysis. The results showed that “Easily agitated” was the central node (strength = 1.519, EI = 1.967); “Irritable” and “Mouth Dryness” were top predictors (Out-EI = 1.101, 1.100), with depressive symptoms as the convergence hub. “Easily agitated” had the strongest direct negative impact on life satisfaction (cross-cluster out-predictability = −0.653). This study elucidates depression-anxiety-stress network mechanisms in higher vocational freshmen, providing a theoretical framework and targeted intervention guidance (e.g., focusing on somatic and emotional nodes).

Keywords

Vocational college freshmen; depression-anxiety-stress; network topology; longitudinal analysis; life satisfaction
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