| Literature DB >> 17454667 |
Catherine Crane1, Thorsten Barnhofer, J Mark, G Williams.
Abstract
Previously depressed and never-depressed individuals identified personal characteristics (self-guides) defining their ideal, ought, and feared selves. One week later they completed the autobiographical memory test (AMT). For each participant the number of AMT cues that reflected self-guide content was determined to produce an index of AMT cue self-relevance. Individuals who had never been depressed showed no significant relationship between cue self-relevance and specificity. In contrast, in previously depressed participants there was a highly significant negative correlation between cue self-relevance and specificity--the greater the number of AMT cues that reflected self-guide content, the fewer specific memories participants recalled. It is suggested that in individuals with a history of depression, cues reflecting self-guide content are more likely to prompt a shift to processing of information within the long-term self (Conway, Singer, & Tagini, 2004), increasing the likelihood that self-related semantic information will be provided in response to cues on the autobiographical memory test.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17454667 PMCID: PMC2797706 DOI: 10.1080/09658210701256530
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Memory ISSN: 0965-8211
Figure 1.A summary of the self-memory system (SMS) as described by Conway et al. (2004).
Descriptive statistics for self-discrepancy questionnaire
| Similarity | 32.11 | 6.55 | 30.05 | 5.39 |
| Likelihood | 37.83 | 5.25 | 35.05 | 5.63 |
| Importance | 41.56 | 3.36 | 43.05 | 3.69 |
| Similarity | 33.90 | 7.73 | 29.10 | 8.40 |
| Likelihood | 36.60 | 8.05 | 33.71 | 7.50 |
| Importance | 39.35 | 7.80 | 42.29 | 4.70 |
| Similarity | 20.95 | 7.00 | 24.81 | 9.12 |
| Likelihood | 20.57 | 7.24 | 24.04 | 10.06 |
| Importance | 39.71 | 5.31 | 41.83 | 6.86 |
Scores on each variable could range from 0 (lowest similarity, importance, likelihood) to 49 (highest similarity, importance, likelihood). For feared self-guides higher ratings are more negative (i.e., more similarity to a feared self-concept).
Number of AMT responses falling into each category (36 items in total)
| Specific | 24.48 (68%) | 6.05 | 22.17 (61.6%) | 8.39 |
| Extended | 3.05 (8.5%) | 2.82 | 3.04 (8.4%) | 2.34 |
| Categoric | 2.10 (5.8%) | 1.87 | 2.70 (7.5%) | 3.32 |
| Associate | 1.19 (3.3%) | 1.72 | 2.22 (6.2%) | 3.42 |
| Omission | 5.14 (14.3%) | 3.82 | 5.87 (16.3%) | 5.94 |
Regression model examining the contribution of past history of MDD and cue self-relevance to the prediction of number of specific memories retrieved on the AMT
| Model 1 | Past MDD | −2.30 | 2.23 | .16 | −1.03 | .31 |
| Model 2 | Past MDD | −2.84 | 2.13 | −.20 | −1.33 | .19 |
| Cue Self-Relevance | −1.11 | .49 | −.33 | −2.28 | .03 | |
| Model 3 | Past MDD | 13.57 | 4.98 | .93 | 2.73 | .009 |
| Cue Self-Relevance | .17 | .56 | .05 | .30 | .77 | |
| Past MDD* Cue Self-Relevance | −3.11 | .87 | −1.23 | −3.56 | .001 |
Model 1: R2 −.03, F(1, 42) =1.07, p = .31.
Model 2: R2 = .14, F(2, 41) = 3.20, ρ= .051, ΔR2 = .11, ΔF(1, 41) = 5.22, Sig ΔF p = .03.
Model 3: R2 = .34, F(3, 40) = 6.97, p = .001, ΔR2 = .21, ΔF(1, 40) = 12.69, Sig ΔF p = .001.
Figure 2.Relationship between the number of self-relevant AMT cues and number of specific memories recalled in never-depressed (A) and previously depressed (B) participants.