Publication | Closed Access
How are depression and autobiographical memory retrieval related to culture?
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Citations
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References
2011
Year
Autobiographical Memory RetrievalAffective NeuroscienceCultural FactorMental HealthHuman MemorySocial SciencesPsychologyDepressed IndividualsMemoryCultural MemoryCognitive BiasPsychiatryDepressionCultureCross-cultural PerspectiveCultural PsychiatryMedicinePsychopathologyCultural Psychology
This study investigated how culture influences the association between autobiographical memory retrieval and depression. Thirty clinically depressed patients and 30 controls, 15 each from Britain and Taiwan, completed the English and Chinese versions of the Autobiographical Memory Cueing Task (AMT). Overall, the depressed individuals from both cultural groups retrieved significantly fewer specific and more categoric autobiographical memories than their matched, nondepressed controls. Within the control groups, the British participants retrieved significantly more specific autobiographical memories and fewer categoric memories than their Taiwanese counterparts. These results suggest that difficulty in retrieving specific autobiographical memories typical of depression may be a cognitive bias that occurs across cultures.
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