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  1. The Effects of Subliminal Goal Priming on Emotional Response Inhibition in Cases of Major Depression.Man Zhang, Suhong Wang, Jing Zhang, Can Jiao, Yuqi Chen, Ni Chen, Yijia Zhao, Yonger Wang & Shufang Zhang - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Previous studies have provided evidence that automatic emotion regulation, which is primed by control goals, can change emotion trajectory unconsciously. However, the cognitive mechanism and associated changes in depression remain unclear. The current study aimed to examine whether subliminal goal priming could change the emotional response inhibition among patients with major depressive disorder and their healthy controls. A group of patients with depression and a healthy control group were both primed subliminally by playing control goal related or neutral words for (...)
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  • Mapping Dynamic Interactions Among Cognitive Biases in Depression.Jonas Everaert, Amit Bernstein, Jutta Joormann & Ernst H. W. Koster - 2020 - Emotion Review 12 (2):93-110.
    Depression is theorized to be caused in part by biased cognitive processing of emotional information. Yet, prior research has adopted a reductionist approach that does not characterize how biases i...
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  • Cognitive Control, Cognitive Biases and Emotion Regulation in Depression: A New Proposal for an Integrative Interplay Model.Dolores Villalobos, Javier Pacios & Carmelo Vázquez - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Research traditions on cognition and depression focus on relatively unconnected aspects of cognitive functioning. On one hand, the neuropsychological perspective has concentrated on cognitive control difficulties as a prominent feature of this condition. On the other hand, the clinical psychology perspective has focused on cognitive biases and repetitive negative patterns of thinking for emotional information. A review of the literature from both fields reveals that difficulties are more evident for mood-congruent materials, suggesting that cognitive control difficulties interact with cognitive biases (...)
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  • Coherence of attention and memory biases in currently and previously depressed women.Amanda Fernandez, Leanne Quigley, Keith Dobson & Christopher Sears - 2022 - Cognition and Emotion 36 (7):1239-1254.
    Previous research has found that depression is characterised by biased processing of emotional information. Although most studies have examined cognitive biases in isolation, simultaneous examination of multiple biases is required to understand how they may interact and influence one another to produce depression vulnerability. In this study, the attention and memory biases of currently depressed, previously depressed, and never depressed women were examined using the same stimuli and a unified methodology. Participants viewed negative, positive, and neutral words while their eye (...)
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  • Depressive symptoms and cognitive control: the role of affective interference.Carola Dell’Acqua, Simone Messerotti Benvenuti, Antonino Vallesi, Daniela Palomba & Ettore Ambrosini - 2022 - Cognition and Emotion 36 (7):1389-1403.
    Depressive symptoms are characterised by reduced cognitive control. However, whether depressive symptoms are linked to difficulty in exerting cognitive control in general or over emotional content specifically remains unclear. To better differentiate between affective interference or general cognitive control difficulties in people with depressive symptoms, we employed a non emotional (cold) and an emotional (hot) version of a task-switching paradigm in a nonclinical sample of young adults (N = 82) with varying levels of depressive symptoms. Depressive symptoms were linked to (...)
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