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Biased processing of emotional information in girls at risk for depression.
422
Citations
39
References
2007
Year
Affective NeuroscienceMental HealthChild PsychiatryPsychologySocial SciencesAffective ScienceDevelopmental PsychologyMood SymptomChild PsychologyPsychiatryDepressionPsychiatric DisorderElevated RiskMood SpectrumChild DevelopmentEmotional InformationDepressed MothersMood DisordersEmotional DevelopmentMedicineEmotionRecurrent EpisodesPsychopathology
Researchers have documented that children of depressed mothers are at elevated risk for developing a depressive disorder themselves. There is currently little understanding, however, of what factors place these children at elevated risk. In the present study, the authors investigated whether never-disordered daughters whose mothers have experienced recurrent episodes of depression during their daughters' lifetime are characterized by biased processing of emotional information. Following a negative mood induction, participants completed an emotional-faces dot-probe task. Daughters at elevated risk for depression, but not control daughters of never-disordered mothers, selectively attended to negative facial expressions. In contrast, only control daughters selectively attended to positive facial expressions. These results provide support for cognitive vulnerability models of depression.
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