Objective: Cognitive theories suggest people with depression interpret self-referential social information negatively. However, it is unclear whether these biases precede or follow depression. We investigated whether facial expression recognition was associated with depressive symptoms cross-sectionally and longitudinally. Methods: Prospective cohort study of people who had visited UK primary care in the past year reporting depressive symptoms (n = 509). Depressive symptoms were measured using the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) at four time-points, 2 weeks apart. A computerised task assessed happy and sad facial expression recognition at three time-points (n = 505 at time 1). The unbiased hit rate measured ability to recognise emot...
OBJECTIVE: To test the association between recall for socially rewarding (positive) and/or socially ...
Background and objectives: Interpersonal difficulties are common in depression, but their underlying...
The present study aimed to clarify: 1) the presence of depression-related attention bias related to ...
Cognitive theories of depression posit that perception is negatively biased in depressive disorder. ...
This study examined the association between trait depression and information-processing biases. Thir...
This study used a morphed categorical perception facial expression task to evaluate whether patients...
Mood affects memory and social judgments. However, findings are inconsistent with regard to how mood...
Cognitive models of depression suggest that depressed individuals exhibit a tendency to attribute ne...
Impaired facial expression recognition has been associated with features of major depression, which ...
Adolescent onset depression places a high burden on those who suffer from it, and is difficult to tr...
The aim was to establish if the memory bias for sad faces, reported in clinically depressed patients...
AbstractEmotion biases feature prominently in cognitive theories of depression and are a focus of ps...
Depression is a common mental health disorder, with 12 of the UK population diagnosed at any one tim...
BACKGROUND: To elucidate whether abnormal facial emotion processing represents a vulnerability fact...
Cognitive theories suggest that attentional biases may contribute to both social anxiety and depress...
OBJECTIVE: To test the association between recall for socially rewarding (positive) and/or socially ...
Background and objectives: Interpersonal difficulties are common in depression, but their underlying...
The present study aimed to clarify: 1) the presence of depression-related attention bias related to ...
Cognitive theories of depression posit that perception is negatively biased in depressive disorder. ...
This study examined the association between trait depression and information-processing biases. Thir...
This study used a morphed categorical perception facial expression task to evaluate whether patients...
Mood affects memory and social judgments. However, findings are inconsistent with regard to how mood...
Cognitive models of depression suggest that depressed individuals exhibit a tendency to attribute ne...
Impaired facial expression recognition has been associated with features of major depression, which ...
Adolescent onset depression places a high burden on those who suffer from it, and is difficult to tr...
The aim was to establish if the memory bias for sad faces, reported in clinically depressed patients...
AbstractEmotion biases feature prominently in cognitive theories of depression and are a focus of ps...
Depression is a common mental health disorder, with 12 of the UK population diagnosed at any one tim...
BACKGROUND: To elucidate whether abnormal facial emotion processing represents a vulnerability fact...
Cognitive theories suggest that attentional biases may contribute to both social anxiety and depress...
OBJECTIVE: To test the association between recall for socially rewarding (positive) and/or socially ...
Background and objectives: Interpersonal difficulties are common in depression, but their underlying...
The present study aimed to clarify: 1) the presence of depression-related attention bias related to ...