Background
Psychological Domains Measured
Measures sadness, emotional distress, low mood, and reduced emotional well-being.
Measures reduced enjoyment, emotional disengagement, and loss of interest in daily activities.
Measures tiredness, exhaustion, low motivation, and reduced emotional and physical energy.
Measures self-esteem, confidence, and feelings of personal adequacy or self-worth.
Measures guilt, self-criticism, negative self-evaluation, and feelings of personal failure.
Measures hopelessness, feelings that life lacks value, and thoughts related to death or self-harm.
Measures focus problems, distractibility, and difficulties maintaining attention.
Measures agitation, internal tension, nervous energy, and inability to remain calm.
Measures slowed thinking, reduced movement, low responsiveness, and behavioral slowing.
Measures insomnia, nighttime sleep disruption, and difficulty maintaining healthy sleep patterns.
Measures appetite loss, reduced eating motivation, and decreased food intake.
Measures increased eating behavior, emotional eating, and appetite elevation.
Procedure
This questionnaire is designed to be completed by adults and adolescents based on their recent emotional and psychological experiences.
Participants select the response option that best describes how frequently they have experienced each symptom or emotional difficulty.
The assessment focuses on depressive symptoms, emotional well-being, motivation, concentration, sleep, appetite, and psychological distress during recent functioning.
Participation
This assessment is intended for educational, screening, and research purposes only.
Results should not be considered a clinical diagnosis or substitute for professional psychological, psychiatric, or medical evaluation.
Individuals experiencing severe emotional distress, hopelessness, suicidal thoughts, or major impairment in daily functioning are strongly encouraged to seek support from a qualified mental health professional or healthcare provider.
Scoring & Interpretation
Responses are scored according to symptom frequency and severity.
Higher scores generally indicate stronger depressive symptoms, emotional distress, fatigue, concentration difficulties, hopelessness, and mood-related impairment.
The MDI is commonly used as a screening tool to help identify individuals who may benefit from additional psychological or psychiatric evaluation.
Major Depression Inventory (MDI) Questionnaire
Below is the Major Depression Inventory (MDI), a digitally adapted 12- items self-assessment questionnaire. This assessment does not provide a clinical diagnosis, medical determination, or substitute for professional psychological evaluation.
Psychometric Norms
Current normative data for theCurrent normative data for the Major Depression Inventory (MDI) are derived from 2 anonymous participant responses collected through TraitProfiler between 2026 and 2026. All response data are collected anonymously and are intended exclusively for educational, psychometric, and non-commercial research purposes.
Sources
- Bech, P., Rasmussen, N. K., Olsen, L. R., Noerholm, V., & Abildgaard, W. The sensitivity and specificity of the Major Depression Inventory, using the Present State Examination as the index of diagnostic validity.