This study examined the influence of sad mood on the judgment of ambiguous facial emotion expressions among 47 healthy volunteers who had been induced to feel sad (n = 13), neutral (n = 15), or happy (n = 19) emotions by watching video clips. The findings suggest that when the targets were ambiguous, participants who were in a sad mood tended to classify them in the negative emotional categories rather than the positive emotional categories. Also, this observation indicates that emotion-specific negative bias in the judgment of facial expressions is associated with a sad mood. The finding argues against a general impairment in decoding facial expressions. Furthermore, the observed mood-congruent negative bias was best predicted by spatial p...
AbstractEmotion biases feature prominently in cognitive theories of depression and are a focus of ps...
Depressed people tend to avoid eye-contact in social situations and in experimental settings, wherea...
Being deficient in the ability to process the facial emotions of others has ramifications on one’s s...
Mood affects memory and social judgments. However, findings are inconsistent with regard to how mood...
We explored the face classification processing mechanism in depressed patients, especially the biase...
This study used a morphed categorical perception facial expression task to evaluate whether patients...
Cognitive models of depression suggest that depressed individuals exhibit a tendency to attribute ne...
The judgement of healthy subject rating the emotional expressions of a set of schematic drawn faces ...
Existing research shows that a sad mood hinders emotion recognition. More generally, it has been sho...
Depressed individuals are biased to perceive, interpret, and judge ambiguous cues in a negative/pess...
Mood has varied effects on cognitive performance including the accuracy of face recognition (Lundh &...
Emotion biases feature prominently in cognitive theories of depression and are a focus of psychologi...
Impaired facial expression recognition has been associated with features of major depression, which ...
Studies investigating on the ability of depressed patients to decode emotional expressions have most...
AbstractEmotion biases feature prominently in cognitive theories of depression and are a focus of ps...
Depressed people tend to avoid eye-contact in social situations and in experimental settings, wherea...
Being deficient in the ability to process the facial emotions of others has ramifications on one’s s...
Mood affects memory and social judgments. However, findings are inconsistent with regard to how mood...
We explored the face classification processing mechanism in depressed patients, especially the biase...
This study used a morphed categorical perception facial expression task to evaluate whether patients...
Cognitive models of depression suggest that depressed individuals exhibit a tendency to attribute ne...
The judgement of healthy subject rating the emotional expressions of a set of schematic drawn faces ...
Existing research shows that a sad mood hinders emotion recognition. More generally, it has been sho...
Depressed individuals are biased to perceive, interpret, and judge ambiguous cues in a negative/pess...
Mood has varied effects on cognitive performance including the accuracy of face recognition (Lundh &...
Emotion biases feature prominently in cognitive theories of depression and are a focus of psychologi...
Impaired facial expression recognition has been associated with features of major depression, which ...
Studies investigating on the ability of depressed patients to decode emotional expressions have most...
AbstractEmotion biases feature prominently in cognitive theories of depression and are a focus of ps...
Depressed people tend to avoid eye-contact in social situations and in experimental settings, wherea...
Being deficient in the ability to process the facial emotions of others has ramifications on one’s s...