| Literature DB >> 30192853 |
Emily J Urban1, Susan T Charles1, Linda J Levine1, David M Almeida2.
Abstract
Reports of emotions experienced over the past week can be influenced by memory bias, which is more pronounced for people with depression. No studies, however, have examined memory bias for specific emotion clusters (e.g., sadness, anxiety, and anger) experienced on a day-to-day basis among people with depression or a history of depression. Participants (N = 1,657) from the Midlife in the United States Study were assessed for depression. Approximately 6 months later, participants reported their emotional experiences for 8 days and recalled these experiences on the final day. Differences in recalled and reported emotion were compared between participants with and without a history of depression. Participants overestimated experience only of negative emotions, particularly anger, and this negativity bias was greatest for participants with a history of depression. Feelings related to anger were prone to greater overestimation than sadness or anxiety. These findings emphasize the role of memory bias in retrospective reports of specific emotions and illustrate the presence of an amplified memory bias among people who are at a greater risk for recurrent depressive episodes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30192853 PMCID: PMC6128594 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0203574
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Pattern matrix of negative affect items.
| Negative Emotion Variable | Sadness | Anger | Anxiety |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hopeless | -.04 | -.14 | |
| So sad nothing could cheer you up | .01 | -.05 | |
| Worthless | .05 | .02 | |
| Lonely | .02 | .26 | |
| Ashamed | -.06 | .05 | |
| Everything is an effort | -.16 | .06 | |
| Angry | .01 | -.10 | |
| Frustrated | .05 | .04 | |
| Upset | .10 | .03 | |
| Irritable | -.08 | .18 | |
| Jittery | -.04 | .03 | |
| Nervous | .01 | -.09 | |
| Restless/Fidgety | .03 | -.19 | |
| Afraid | .35 | .03 |
Note. Sadness, Anger, and Anxiety factors accounted for 46.29%, 11.41%, and 7.41% of variance in Negative Affect ratings, respectively. A principal component analysis with an oblique rotation was used.
Effects of history of depression on experience and recall of positive & negative affect.
| Within Subjects Main Effects | Valence | 166.47 | .092 [.071, .114] |
| Report Type | 91.44 | .052 [.036, .071] | |
| Between Subjects Main Effects | Age | 18.44 | .011 [.004, .021] |
| Gender | 4.96 | .003 [.002, .009] | |
| Education | 3.37 | .002 [.000, .007] | |
| HoD | 19.72 | .012 [.005, .022] | |
| Two-way Interactions | Valence*Report Type | 18.14 | .011 [.004, .021] |
| w/ Valence | Age*Valence | 59.63 | .035 [.021, .051] |
| Gender*Valence | 0.38 | .000 [.000, .003] | |
| Education*Valence | 6.83 | .004 [.000, .011] | |
| HoD *Valence | 123.40 | .070 [.051, .090] | |
| w/ Report Type | Age*Report Type | 53.12 | .031 [.019, .046] |
| Gender*Report Type | 2.26 | .001 [.000, .006] | |
| Education*Report Type | 5.37 | .003 [.000, .009] | |
| HoD *Report Type | 26.01 | .015 [.007, .027] | |
| Three-way Interactions with Valence*Report Type | Age*Valence*Report Type | 7.03 | .004 [.001, .011] |
| Gender*Valence*Report Type | 12.21 | .007 [.002, .016] | |
| Education*Valence*Report Type | 5.36 | .003 [.000, .009] | |
| HoD*Valence*Report Type | 13.85 | .008 [.003, .017] |
Note. Valence refers to positive compared to negative affect. Type refers to daily emotion reports (averaged across the week) compared to recalled emotion (made at the end of the week). HoD = History of Depression. CI = Confidence interval.
***p < .001.
**p < .01.
*p < .05.
Fig 1Negative emotion by recent history of depression.
Note. Error bars represent standard error values. HoD = History of Depression. The model is adjusted for gender and evaluated at the following values: Age = 56.67, Education = 7.39.
Effects of history of depression on experience and recall of sadness, anxiety, & anger.
| Within Subjects Main Effects | NACluster | 108.11 | .061 [.048, .075] |
| Report Type | 113.66 | .064 [.047, .084] | |
| Between Subjects Main Effects | Age | 63.53 | .037 .024, .053] |
| Gender | 10.47 | .006 [.002, .014] | |
| Education | 6.03 | .004 [.000, .010] | |
| HoD | 137.01 | .077 .057, .098] | |
| 2-way Interactions | NACluster *ReportType | 62.32 | .036 [.026, .048] |
| w/ NACluster | Age* NACluster | 122.17 | .069 [.055, .083] |
| Gender* NACluster | 4.39 | .003 [.000, .006] | |
| Education*NACluster | 19.34 | .012 [.006, .018] | |
| HoD * NACluster | 0.43 | .000 [.000, .002] | |
| w/ Report Type | Age*ReportType | 60.57 | .035 [.022, .051] |
| Gender*ReportType | 13.97 | .008 [.003, .017] | |
| Education*ReportType | 13.78 | .008 [.003, .017] | |
| HoD *ReportType | 38.46 | .023 [.012, .036] | |
| 3-way Interactions with Valence*ReportType | Age* NACluster*ReportType | 60.56 | .035 [.025, .047] |
| Gender* NACluster*ReportType | 1.42 | .001 [.000, .003] | |
| Education* NACluster*ReportType | 7.72 | .005 [.001, .009] | |
| HoD* NACluster*ReportType | 0.11 | .000 [.000, .001] |
Note. NACluster refers to negative affect cluster (anger, anxiety, or sadness). ReportType refers to daily emotion reports (averaged across the week) compared to recalled emotion (made at the end of the week). HoD = History of Depression. CI = Confidence interval. Due to violations to assumptions of sphericity, a Greenhouse-Geisser correction was used to adjust degrees of freedom for relevant tests.
aDF = (1.91, 3146.33).
bDF = (1.82, 2999.07).
***p < .001.
**p < .01.
*p < .05.
Fig 2Negative clusters by recent history of depression.
Note. Error bars represent standard error values. HoD = History of Depression. The model is adjusted for gender and evaluated at the following values: Age = 56.67, Education = 7.39.