We used an experience sampling design to investigate biases in affective forecasting and recall in individuals with varying levels of dysphoric and anxiety symptoms. Participants who were higher in dysphoria demonstrated stronger (i.e., more pessimistic) negative mood prediction and recall biases, and weaker (i.e., less optimistic) positive mood prediction and recall biases. This was true even for judgments about very short (3-hour long) timeframes. Participants who were higher in anxiety demonstrated stronger negative mood prediction biases, but positive mood prediction biases that were on par with those who were lower in anxiety. Anxiety was not associated with mood recall biases. Neither dysphoria nor anxiety was associated with bias in ...
We used an experience sampling methodology to investigate what was more predictive of future dysphor...
Depression-related differences in memory for emotional material are well established, but recognitio...
Emotional disorders have been related with attentional and memory biases, especially for emotional m...
"NIH Public Access Author Manuscript"We used ecological momentary assessment to explore depressive a...
Introduction. Cognitive accounts assert that emotionally biased information-processing mechanisms pl...
Introduction. Cognitive accounts assert that emotionally biased information-processing mechanisms pl...
Introduction. Guided by cognitive models of depression, research has yielded substantial empirical d...
The ability to accurately predict future feelings and emotions, termed affective forecasting, is an ...
Previous research suggests that in response to negative events, people fail to recognize that their ...
Biases in self-evaluation and memory were compared across nondysphoric (ND), experimentally dysphori...
Reduced tendency to engage in potentially rewarding activities is a hallmark of depression. The pres...
Reduced tendency to engage in potentially rewarding activities is a hallmark of depression. The pres...
The most recent extension of the cognitive vulnerability model of depression suggests that people wi...
This study used an experience sampling design to investigate the influence of dysphoria on positive ...
Reduced tendency to engage in potentially rewarding activities is a hallmark of depression. The pres...
We used an experience sampling methodology to investigate what was more predictive of future dysphor...
Depression-related differences in memory for emotional material are well established, but recognitio...
Emotional disorders have been related with attentional and memory biases, especially for emotional m...
"NIH Public Access Author Manuscript"We used ecological momentary assessment to explore depressive a...
Introduction. Cognitive accounts assert that emotionally biased information-processing mechanisms pl...
Introduction. Cognitive accounts assert that emotionally biased information-processing mechanisms pl...
Introduction. Guided by cognitive models of depression, research has yielded substantial empirical d...
The ability to accurately predict future feelings and emotions, termed affective forecasting, is an ...
Previous research suggests that in response to negative events, people fail to recognize that their ...
Biases in self-evaluation and memory were compared across nondysphoric (ND), experimentally dysphori...
Reduced tendency to engage in potentially rewarding activities is a hallmark of depression. The pres...
Reduced tendency to engage in potentially rewarding activities is a hallmark of depression. The pres...
The most recent extension of the cognitive vulnerability model of depression suggests that people wi...
This study used an experience sampling design to investigate the influence of dysphoria on positive ...
Reduced tendency to engage in potentially rewarding activities is a hallmark of depression. The pres...
We used an experience sampling methodology to investigate what was more predictive of future dysphor...
Depression-related differences in memory for emotional material are well established, but recognitio...
Emotional disorders have been related with attentional and memory biases, especially for emotional m...