Cognitive Control Biases in Depression: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

被引:8
|
作者
Quigley, Leanne [1 ,4 ]
Thiruchselvam, Thulasi [2 ,3 ]
Quilty, Lena C. [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Yesh Univ, Ferkauf Grad Sch Psychol, Bronx, NY USA
[2] Ctr Addict & Mental Hlth, Toronto, ON, Canada
[3] Univ Toronto, Dept Psychiat, Toronto, ON, Canada
[4] Yeshiva Univ, Ferkauf Grad Sch Psychol, 1165 Morris Pk Ave, Bronx, NY 10461 USA
关键词
cognitive control; executive functioning; cognitive bias; depression; UPDATING EMOTIONAL CONTENT; ATTENTIONAL BIAS; WORKING-MEMORY; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; NEURAL BASIS; EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONS; STROOP TASK; REMITTED DEPRESSION; INHIBITORY CONTROL; MAJOR DEPRESSION;
D O I
10.1037/bul0000372
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Cognitive theories of depression propose that impaired cognitive control of emotional material may be involved in the onset, maintenance, and/or recurrence of depression. The present study is a systematic review and meta-analysis of the literature on cognitive control biases in depression. Seventy-three articles describing 77 independent studies (N = 4,134 participants) were included in the meta-analysis. Depression-vulnerable individuals, including individuals with diagnosed major depressive disorder (MDD), remitted MDD (rMDD), and dysphoria, showed significantly impaired cognitive control of negative stimuli relative to both neutral and positive stimuli. Control samples did not exhibit the aforementioned biases, and instead showed significantly worse cognitive control of positive stimuli relative to negative stimuli and similar cognitive control of neutral stimuli relative to both negative and positive stimuli. Evidence for sample or methodological moderators of effect sizes was limited and inconsistent. Based on our review, we recommend that researchers assess and examine directional and causal relationships between multiple cognitive control biases (especially in updating and set shifting), investigate the causal relationships between general deficits and biases in cognitive control, select tasks that control for nontarget influences on performance (e.g., processing speed), use sample sizes adequately powered to detect small effects, provide psychometric information on task indices, consistently report within-groups biases and between-groups comparisons of biases, and examine potential moderators of cognitive control biases at the individual level.
引用
收藏
页码:662 / 709
页数:48
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