Literature DB >> 22650378

Depression reduces perceptual sensitivity for positive words and pictures.

Ruth Ann Atchley1, Stephen S Ilardi, Keith M Young, Natalie N Stroupe, Aminda J O'Hare, Steven L Bistricky, Elizabeth Collison, Linzi Gibson, Jonathan Schuster, Rebecca J Lepping.   

Abstract

There is evidence of maladaptive attentional biases for lexical information (e.g., Atchley, Ilardi, & Enloe, 2003; Atchley, Stringer, Mathias, Ilardi, & Minatrea, 2007) and for pictographic stimuli (e.g., Gotlib, Krasnoperova, Yue, & Joormann, 2004) among patients with depression. The current research looks for depressotypic processing biases among depressed out-patients and non-clinical controls, using both verbal and pictorial stimuli. A d' measure (sensitivity index) was used to examine each participant's perceptual sensitivity threshold. Never-depressed controls evidenced a detection bias for positive picture stimuli, while depressed participants had no such bias. With verbal stimuli, depressed individuals showed specific decrements in the detection of positive person-referent words (WINNER), but not with positive non-person-referent words (SUNSHINE) or with negative words. Never-depressed participants showed no such differences across word types. In the current study, depression is characterised both by an absence of the normal positivistic biases seen in individuals without mood disorders (consistent with McCabe & Gotlib, 1995), and by a specific reduction in sensitivity for person-referent positive information that might be inconsistent with depressotypic self-schemas.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22650378     DOI: 10.1080/02699931.2012.660134

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cogn Emot        ISSN: 0269-9931


  9 in total

1.  Increased neural sensitivity to self-relevant stimuli in major depressive disorder.

Authors:  Erik M Benau; Kaylin E Hill; Ruth Ann Atchley; Aminda J O'Hare; Linzi J Gibson; Greg Hajcak; Stephen S Ilardi; Dan Foti
Journal:  Psychophysiology       Date:  2019-02-22       Impact factor: 4.016

Review 2.  Reward devaluation: Dot-probe meta-analytic evidence of avoidance of positive information in depressed persons.

Authors:  E Samuel Winer; Taban Salem
Journal:  Psychol Bull       Date:  2015-11-30       Impact factor: 17.737

Review 3.  Separate neural networks of implicit emotional processing between pictures and words: A coordinate-based meta-analysis of brain imaging studies.

Authors:  Chunliang Feng; Ruolei Gu; Ting Li; Li Wang; Zhixing Zhang; Wenbo Luo; Simon B Eickhoff
Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev       Date:  2021-09-22       Impact factor: 9.052

4.  Associations between childhood maltreatment and emotion processing biases in major depression: results from a dot-probe task.

Authors:  Vivien Günther; Udo Dannlowski; Anette Kersting; Thomas Suslow
Journal:  BMC Psychiatry       Date:  2015-06-06       Impact factor: 3.630

5.  Judgment of emotional information expressed by prosody and semantics in patients with unipolar depression.

Authors:  Sarah Schlipf; Anil Batra; Gudrun Walter; Christina Zeep; Dirk Wildgruber; Andreas Fallgatter; Thomas Ethofer
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2013-07-23

6.  Emotional Biases and Recurrence in Major Depressive Disorder. Results of 2.5 Years Follow-Up of Drug-Free Cohort Vulnerable for Recurrence.

Authors:  Henricus G Ruhe; Roel J T Mocking; Caroline A Figueroa; Paulien W J Seeverens; Nessa Ikani; Anna Tyborowska; Michael Browning; Janna N Vrijsen; Catherine J Harmer; Aart H Schene
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2019-03-28       Impact factor: 4.157

7.  Negative Bias During Early Attentional Engagement in Major Depressive Disorder as Examined Using a Two-Stage Model: High Sensitivity to Sad but Bluntness to Happy Cues.

Authors:  Xiang Ao; Licheng Mo; Zhaoguo Wei; Wenwen Yu; Fang Zhou; Dandan Zhang
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2020-11-17       Impact factor: 3.169

8.  Negative affect interference and fear of happiness are independently associated with depressive symptoms.

Authors:  D Gage Jordan; Amanda C Collins; Matthew G Dunaway; Jenna Kilgore; E Samuel Winer
Journal:  J Clin Psychol       Date:  2020-10-20

9.  Task and Resting-State fMRI Reveal Altered Salience Responses to Positive Stimuli in Patients with Major Depressive Disorder.

Authors:  Yang Yang; Ning Zhong; Kazuyuki Imamura; Shengfu Lu; Mi Li; Haiyan Zhou; Huaizhou Li; Xiaojing Yang; Zhijiang Wan; Gang Wang; Bin Hu; Kuncheng Li
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-05-18       Impact factor: 3.240

  9 in total

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