Information Processing in Clinically Depressed and Anxious Children and Adolescents

The investigation of cognitive content and processes in childhood anxiety and depression has lagged behind similar research in the adult population. What studies do exist have largely restricted themselves to examining the nature of the thoughts that anxious and depressed children report. There is a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of child psychology and psychiatry 1997-07, Vol.38 (5), p.535-541
Hauptverfasser: Dalgleish, Tim, Taghavi, Reza, Neshat-Doost, Hamid, Moradi, Ali, Yule, William, Canterbury, Rachel
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container_end_page 541
container_issue 5
container_start_page 535
container_title Journal of child psychology and psychiatry
container_volume 38
creator Dalgleish, Tim
Taghavi, Reza
Neshat-Doost, Hamid
Moradi, Ali
Yule, William
Canterbury, Rachel
description The investigation of cognitive content and processes in childhood anxiety and depression has lagged behind similar research in the adult population. What studies do exist have largely restricted themselves to examining the nature of the thoughts that anxious and depressed children report. There is almost no research examining the ways in which anxious and depressed children perceive, attend to, remember, or think and make judgements about, emotional material. The present study investigated the subjective probability judgements that anxious and depressed children make concerning future negative events. Subjects generated probability estimates either for themselves or for other children for a range of events on a visual analogue scale. Events were either physically‐threat‐related or socially‐threat‐related. The results revealed no differences of interest with respect to type of threat but interesting differences between the groups with respect to reference. Depressed subjects estimated that events were equally likely to happen to themselves as to other children whereas both the controls and anxious children estimated that negative events were more likely to happen to others than to themselves, with this effect being stronger in the anxious group. These results are discussed in the context of the adult literature and also the limited literature on emotion‐related cognitive processing in children.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1469-7610.1997.tb01540.x
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What studies do exist have largely restricted themselves to examining the nature of the thoughts that anxious and depressed children report. There is almost no research examining the ways in which anxious and depressed children perceive, attend to, remember, or think and make judgements about, emotional material. The present study investigated the subjective probability judgements that anxious and depressed children make concerning future negative events. Subjects generated probability estimates either for themselves or for other children for a range of events on a visual analogue scale. Events were either physically‐threat‐related or socially‐threat‐related. The results revealed no differences of interest with respect to type of threat but interesting differences between the groups with respect to reference. Depressed subjects estimated that events were equally likely to happen to themselves as to other children whereas both the controls and anxious children estimated that negative events were more likely to happen to others than to themselves, with this effect being stronger in the anxious group. 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What studies do exist have largely restricted themselves to examining the nature of the thoughts that anxious and depressed children report. There is almost no research examining the ways in which anxious and depressed children perceive, attend to, remember, or think and make judgements about, emotional material. The present study investigated the subjective probability judgements that anxious and depressed children make concerning future negative events. Subjects generated probability estimates either for themselves or for other children for a range of events on a visual analogue scale. Events were either physically‐threat‐related or socially‐threat‐related. The results revealed no differences of interest with respect to type of threat but interesting differences between the groups with respect to reference. 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subjects Adolescent
Adolescents
Anxiety
Anxiety disorders
Anxiety Disorders - psychology
Biological and medical sciences
Child
Child clinical studies
Child psychology
childhood anxiety
childhood depression
Cognition & reasoning
cognitive processing
Comparison
Depression
Depressive Disorder - psychology
Female
Humans
Information processing
Male
Medical sciences
Mental depression
Mental Processes
Mood disorders
Perception
Probability estimates
Psychological Tests
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
title Information Processing in Clinically Depressed and Anxious Children and Adolescents
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