Lack of attentional bias for emotional information in clinically depressed children and adolescents on the dot probe task.

Category Primary study
JournalJournal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines
Year 2000
The present study utilised a cognitive paradigm to investigate attentional biases in clinically depressed children and adolescents. Two groups of children and adolescents--clinically depressed (N = 19) and normal controls (N = 26)--were asked to complete a computerised version of the attentional dot probe paradigm similar to that used by MacLeod, Mathews, and Tata (1986). Results provided no support for an attentional bias, either toward depression-related words or threat words, in the depressed group. This finding is discussed in the context of cognitive theories of anxiety and depression.
Epistemonikos ID: c5a7d2aaec43ffa4a3d4118212e614004f11e8c6
First added on: Oct 16, 2015