Does mood induction elicit emotion recognition biases? : an empirical study with implications for depression research

 

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dc.contributor.advisor Malcolm-Smith, Susan en_ZA
dc.contributor.author Harding, Steven en_ZA
dc.date.accessioned 2015-08-10T06:47:02Z
dc.date.available 2015-08-10T06:47:02Z
dc.date.issued 2015 en_ZA
dc.identifier.citation Harding, S. 2015. Does mood induction elicit emotion recognition biases? : an empirical study with implications for depression research. University of Cape Town. en_ZA
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13691
dc.description.abstract Depression is a highly prevalent, debilitating, and sometimes-fatal mental illness. Typically, its treatment approaches are conceptualised as a dichotomy between psychological and pharmaceutical. However, a new model, in line with cogent philosophical reasoning and recent empirical evidence, integrates these approaches. The cognitive neuropsychological model places affective processing biases as central to depression aetiology and treatment-in both biological psychiatry and cognitive psychology. One affective bias, emotion recognition, is central to the tenets of this model, which, unlike some cognitive theories, places improved affective biases as temporally prior to improved mood, and as the underlying mechanism of antidepressant action. To test this account of emotion recognition bias, 103 undergraduate students participants underwent negative, positive, and neutral mood induction in a betweengroups design to assess whether mood-congruent emotion recognition biases would emerge in a multimodal (facial, vocal, musical) emotion recognition battery, while controlling for depression symptoms and assessing maladaptive cognitive schemas. Few significant emotion recognition biases resulted, but significant negative correlations between negative schemas and overall facial and musical accuracy emerged, even when controlling for depression lending some support to the cognitive neuropsychological model's premise of a bilateral relationship between schemas and emotion recognition, both of which may play a substantial role in the etiology of depression. en_ZA
dc.language.iso eng en_ZA
dc.subject.other Neuropsychology en_ZA
dc.title Does mood induction elicit emotion recognition biases? : an empirical study with implications for depression research en_ZA
dc.type Master Thesis
uct.type.publication Research en_ZA
uct.type.resource Thesis en_ZA
dc.publisher.institution University of Cape Town
dc.publisher.faculty Faculty of Humanities en_ZA
dc.publisher.department Department of Psychology en_ZA
dc.type.qualificationlevel Masters
dc.type.qualificationname MA en_ZA
uct.type.filetype Text
uct.type.filetype Image
dc.identifier.apacitation Harding, S. (2015). <i>Does mood induction elicit emotion recognition biases? : an empirical study with implications for depression research</i>. (Thesis). University of Cape Town ,Faculty of Humanities ,Department of Psychology. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13691 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Harding, Steven. <i>"Does mood induction elicit emotion recognition biases? : an empirical study with implications for depression research."</i> Thesis., University of Cape Town ,Faculty of Humanities ,Department of Psychology, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13691 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Harding S. Does mood induction elicit emotion recognition biases? : an empirical study with implications for depression research. [Thesis]. University of Cape Town ,Faculty of Humanities ,Department of Psychology, 2015 [cited yyyy month dd]. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13691 en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Thesis / Dissertation AU - Harding, Steven AB - Depression is a highly prevalent, debilitating, and sometimes-fatal mental illness. Typically, its treatment approaches are conceptualised as a dichotomy between psychological and pharmaceutical. However, a new model, in line with cogent philosophical reasoning and recent empirical evidence, integrates these approaches. The cognitive neuropsychological model places affective processing biases as central to depression aetiology and treatment-in both biological psychiatry and cognitive psychology. One affective bias, emotion recognition, is central to the tenets of this model, which, unlike some cognitive theories, places improved affective biases as temporally prior to improved mood, and as the underlying mechanism of antidepressant action. To test this account of emotion recognition bias, 103 undergraduate students participants underwent negative, positive, and neutral mood induction in a betweengroups design to assess whether mood-congruent emotion recognition biases would emerge in a multimodal (facial, vocal, musical) emotion recognition battery, while controlling for depression symptoms and assessing maladaptive cognitive schemas. Few significant emotion recognition biases resulted, but significant negative correlations between negative schemas and overall facial and musical accuracy emerged, even when controlling for depression lending some support to the cognitive neuropsychological model's premise of a bilateral relationship between schemas and emotion recognition, both of which may play a substantial role in the etiology of depression. DA - 2015 DB - OpenUCT DP - University of Cape Town LK - https://open.uct.ac.za PB - University of Cape Town PY - 2015 T1 - Does mood induction elicit emotion recognition biases? : an empirical study with implications for depression research TI - Does mood induction elicit emotion recognition biases? : an empirical study with implications for depression research UR - http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13691 ER - en_ZA


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