
Depression-related difficulties disengaging from negative faces are associated with sustained attention to negative feedback during social evaluation and predict stress recovery
- Author
- Alvaro Sanchez Lopez (UGent) , Nuria Romero Martin (UGent) and Rudi De Raedt (UGent)
- Organization
- Abstract
- The present study aimed to clarify: 1) the presence of depression-related attention bias related to a social stressor, 2) its association with depression-related attention biases as measured under standard conditions, and 3) their association with impaired stress recovery in depression. A sample of 39 participants reporting a broad range of depression levels completed a standard eye-tracking paradigm in which they had to engage/disengage their gaze with/from emotional faces. Participants then underwent a stress induction (i.e., giving a speech), in which their eye movements to false emotional feedback were measured, and stress reactivity and recovery were assessed. Depression level was associated with longer times to engage/disengage attention with/from negative faces under standard conditions and with sustained attention to negative feedback during the speech. These depression-related biases were associated and mediated the association between depression level and self-reported stress recovery, predicting lower recovery from stress after giving the speech.
- Keywords
- HEART-RATE-VARIABILITY, EMOTIONAL INFORMATION, EYE-TRACKING, ANXIETY, WOMEN, SYMPTOMS, VULNERABILITY, METAANALYSIS, PERSPECTIVE, PERFORMANCE
Downloads
-
dsfs Sanchez Romero2017 PLOSONE.txt
- data factsheet
- |
- open access
- |
- Text
- |
- 4.11 KB
-
Sanchez Romero2017 PLOSONE.pdf
- full text
- |
- open access
- |
- |
- 1.39 MB
Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8522032
- MLA
- Sanchez Lopez, Alvaro, Nuria Romero Martin, and Rudi De Raedt. “Depression-related Difficulties Disengaging from Negative Faces Are Associated with Sustained Attention to Negative Feedback During Social Evaluation and Predict Stress Recovery.” PLOS ONE 12.3 (2017): n. pag. Print.
- APA
- Sanchez Lopez, A., Romero Martin, N., & De Raedt, R. (2017). Depression-related difficulties disengaging from negative faces are associated with sustained attention to negative feedback during social evaluation and predict stress recovery. PLOS ONE, 12(3).
- Chicago author-date
- Sanchez Lopez, Alvaro, Nuria Romero Martin, and Rudi De Raedt. 2017. “Depression-related Difficulties Disengaging from Negative Faces Are Associated with Sustained Attention to Negative Feedback During Social Evaluation and Predict Stress Recovery.” Plos One 12 (3).
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Sanchez Lopez, Alvaro, Nuria Romero Martin, and Rudi De Raedt. 2017. “Depression-related Difficulties Disengaging from Negative Faces Are Associated with Sustained Attention to Negative Feedback During Social Evaluation and Predict Stress Recovery.” Plos One 12 (3).
- Vancouver
- 1.Sanchez Lopez A, Romero Martin N, De Raedt R. Depression-related difficulties disengaging from negative faces are associated with sustained attention to negative feedback during social evaluation and predict stress recovery. PLOS ONE. San francisco: Public Library Science; 2017;12(3).
- IEEE
- [1]A. Sanchez Lopez, N. Romero Martin, and R. De Raedt, “Depression-related difficulties disengaging from negative faces are associated with sustained attention to negative feedback during social evaluation and predict stress recovery,” PLOS ONE, vol. 12, no. 3, 2017.
@article{8522032, abstract = {The present study aimed to clarify: 1) the presence of depression-related attention bias related to a social stressor, 2) its association with depression-related attention biases as measured under standard conditions, and 3) their association with impaired stress recovery in depression. A sample of 39 participants reporting a broad range of depression levels completed a standard eye-tracking paradigm in which they had to engage/disengage their gaze with/from emotional faces. Participants then underwent a stress induction (i.e., giving a speech), in which their eye movements to false emotional feedback were measured, and stress reactivity and recovery were assessed. Depression level was associated with longer times to engage/disengage attention with/from negative faces under standard conditions and with sustained attention to negative feedback during the speech. These depression-related biases were associated and mediated the association between depression level and self-reported stress recovery, predicting lower recovery from stress after giving the speech.}, articleno = {e0175040}, author = {Sanchez Lopez, Alvaro and Romero Martin, Nuria and De Raedt, Rudi}, issn = {1932-6203}, journal = {PLOS ONE}, keywords = {HEART-RATE-VARIABILITY,EMOTIONAL INFORMATION,EYE-TRACKING,ANXIETY,WOMEN,SYMPTOMS,VULNERABILITY,METAANALYSIS,PERSPECTIVE,PERFORMANCE}, language = {eng}, number = {3}, pages = {24}, publisher = {Public Library Science}, title = {Depression-related difficulties disengaging from negative faces are associated with sustained attention to negative feedback during social evaluation and predict stress recovery}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0175040}, volume = {12}, year = {2017}, }
- Altmetric
- View in Altmetric
- Web of Science
- Times cited: