A mood induction paradigm was used to examine dysphoria-related changes in two types of cognitive processing in individuals who had previously experienced depression. Formerly depressed patients (n = 23) and never-depressed controls (n = 27) completed the Dysfunctional Attitudes Scale, a self-report measure of effortful processing, and performed the Implicit Association Test, an automatic-reaction time task that measures evaluative bias, before and after a negative-mood induction. The formerly depressed group showed both an increase in endorsement of dysfunctional attitudes and a more negative evaluative bias for self-relevant information after the induction, relative to controls—however, there was no association between the mood-linked cha...
In this study, the authors examined whether cognitive therapy alters the association between negativ...
Introduction. Guided by cognitive models of depression, research has yielded substantial empirical d...
Cognitive theories of depression propose that some people are vulnerable to depression because they ...
Much of the current research in depression has focused on the negative cognitions known to be correl...
Cognitive theories of depression have long posited automatic interpretation biases (AIB) as a centra...
The present study examined whether differences in automatic cognitive bias and affect regulation wer...
Earlier studies have shown impaired explicit test and normal implicit test performance in participan...
The most recent extension of the cognitive vulnerability model of depression suggests that people wi...
Cognitive theories of depression posit that automatically activated cognitive schemas, including neg...
Introduction. Cognitive accounts assert that emotionally biased information-processing mechanisms pl...
Mood-induction procedures have been useful to investigate the role of dysfunctional cognitions in de...
This study examined the cognitive operations and responses implicated in depression vulnerability to...
The aim was to establish if the memory bias for sad faces, reported in clinically depressed patients...
Depression is a highly prevalent mood disorder that impairs a person’s social skills and also their ...
Depressed persons have demonstrated emotion based cognitive biases, specifically surrounding vigilan...
In this study, the authors examined whether cognitive therapy alters the association between negativ...
Introduction. Guided by cognitive models of depression, research has yielded substantial empirical d...
Cognitive theories of depression propose that some people are vulnerable to depression because they ...
Much of the current research in depression has focused on the negative cognitions known to be correl...
Cognitive theories of depression have long posited automatic interpretation biases (AIB) as a centra...
The present study examined whether differences in automatic cognitive bias and affect regulation wer...
Earlier studies have shown impaired explicit test and normal implicit test performance in participan...
The most recent extension of the cognitive vulnerability model of depression suggests that people wi...
Cognitive theories of depression posit that automatically activated cognitive schemas, including neg...
Introduction. Cognitive accounts assert that emotionally biased information-processing mechanisms pl...
Mood-induction procedures have been useful to investigate the role of dysfunctional cognitions in de...
This study examined the cognitive operations and responses implicated in depression vulnerability to...
The aim was to establish if the memory bias for sad faces, reported in clinically depressed patients...
Depression is a highly prevalent mood disorder that impairs a person’s social skills and also their ...
Depressed persons have demonstrated emotion based cognitive biases, specifically surrounding vigilan...
In this study, the authors examined whether cognitive therapy alters the association between negativ...
Introduction. Guided by cognitive models of depression, research has yielded substantial empirical d...
Cognitive theories of depression propose that some people are vulnerable to depression because they ...