Recent evidence suggests that a state of good mental health is associated with biased processing of information that supports a positively skewed view of the future. Depression, on the other hand, is associated with unbiased processing of such information. Here, we use brain imaging in conjunction with a belief update task administered to clinically depressed patients and healthy controls to characterize brain activity that supports unbiased belief updating in clinically depressed individuals. Our results reveal that unbiased belief updating in depression is mediated by strong neural coding of estimation errors in response to both good news (in left inferior frontal gyrus and bilateral superior frontal gyrus) and bad news (in right inferior...
Why do some people see their glass as half-empty rather than half-full or even imagine that the glas...
Identifying neurocognitive mechanisms underlying optimism bias is essential to understand its benefi...
Optimism refers to peoples’ general tendency to anticipate good outcomes in areas that are important...
Background Preparing for potentially threatening events in the future is essential for survival. Ant...
Background: Depression is a common illness which is believed to be caused, at least in part, by a te...
Altres ajuts: acord transformatiu CRUE-CSICBackground: Novel theoretical models of depression have r...
When integrating new information into our beliefs, an important factor is valence: whether a piece o...
Contains fulltext : 96309.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)BACKGROUND: Vale...
BACKGROUND: Cognitive theories associate depression with negative biases in information processing. ...
Contains fulltext : 89576.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Mood-congruent...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Depressed people hold positive beliefs about negative cognition (e.g., ru...
BACKGROUND: Modern cognitive neuropsychological models of depression posit that negatively biased em...
BACKGROUND: When challenged with information about the future, healthy participants show an optimist...
Both optimism bias and reward-related attention bias have crucial implications for well-being and me...
Consistent with the combined cognitive bias hypothesis (Hirsch, Clark, & Mathews, 2006), cognitive b...
Why do some people see their glass as half-empty rather than half-full or even imagine that the glas...
Identifying neurocognitive mechanisms underlying optimism bias is essential to understand its benefi...
Optimism refers to peoples’ general tendency to anticipate good outcomes in areas that are important...
Background Preparing for potentially threatening events in the future is essential for survival. Ant...
Background: Depression is a common illness which is believed to be caused, at least in part, by a te...
Altres ajuts: acord transformatiu CRUE-CSICBackground: Novel theoretical models of depression have r...
When integrating new information into our beliefs, an important factor is valence: whether a piece o...
Contains fulltext : 96309.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)BACKGROUND: Vale...
BACKGROUND: Cognitive theories associate depression with negative biases in information processing. ...
Contains fulltext : 89576.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Mood-congruent...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Depressed people hold positive beliefs about negative cognition (e.g., ru...
BACKGROUND: Modern cognitive neuropsychological models of depression posit that negatively biased em...
BACKGROUND: When challenged with information about the future, healthy participants show an optimist...
Both optimism bias and reward-related attention bias have crucial implications for well-being and me...
Consistent with the combined cognitive bias hypothesis (Hirsch, Clark, & Mathews, 2006), cognitive b...
Why do some people see their glass as half-empty rather than half-full or even imagine that the glas...
Identifying neurocognitive mechanisms underlying optimism bias is essential to understand its benefi...
Optimism refers to peoples’ general tendency to anticipate good outcomes in areas that are important...