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Erschienen in: Cognitive Therapy and Research 6/2008

01.12.2008 | Original paper

Schematic Processing: A Comparison of Clinically Depressed, Dysphoric, and Nondepressed College Students

verfasst von: Lisa Halberstadt, Gerald J. Haeffel, Lyn Y. Abramson, Basabi R. Mukherji, Gerald I. Metalsky, Benjamin M. Dykman

Erschienen in: Cognitive Therapy and Research | Ausgabe 6/2008

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Abstract

Reformulations of Beck’s theory (e.g., Dykman et al. J Pers Social Psychol 56:431–445, 1989) propose that depressed and nondepressed people are equally likely to use schematic processing to interpret information. The few studies to test this hypothesis have had methodological shortcomings. Past studies have not included a clinically depressed sample and have failed to assess a full range of potential biases (negative, neutral, and positive). To address these limitations, a recognition-of-information task was administered to clinically depressed, dysphoric, and nondepressed college students. Clinically depressed participants were significantly more likely than nondepressed participants to generate negative interpretations of a self-relevant ambiguous story. Clinically depressed participants also were more likely than both dysphoric and nondepressed participants to refute positive interpretations of the story. However, consistent with reformulations of Beck’s theory, dysphoric participants and nondepressed participants also tended to “go beyond” the information given in the story. Indeed, all three participant groups were equally biased in their interpretations. The difference among the groups was in the direction (negative vs. positive) and the heterogeneity of the biases.
Fußnoten
1
Participants from the original data set were excluded from the current data analyses if they failed to meet criteria for any of the three study groups or if they scored below a predetermined cutoff score for objectively true or false items on the RIT: ≤1 for logically true items and ≥ 1 for logically false items. The logically true and logically false subscales on the RIT provide objective indices of participants’ performance on this measure, with scores below or above the respective cutoffs indicating very poor comprehension and/or memory for the experimental text. We took a conservative approach and eliminated these participants (N = 117) from the data analyses because it would be no surprise if participants who had little memory for the objective facts of the RIT story, and therefore little relevant current situational information available to them, relied on their schemas more so than did other participants. These 117 participants consisted of 8% of participants with BDI scores of 10 or above and 9% of those with BDI scores less than 10.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Schematic Processing: A Comparison of Clinically Depressed, Dysphoric, and Nondepressed College Students
verfasst von
Lisa Halberstadt
Gerald J. Haeffel
Lyn Y. Abramson
Basabi R. Mukherji
Gerald I. Metalsky
Benjamin M. Dykman
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2008
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Cognitive Therapy and Research / Ausgabe 6/2008
Print ISSN: 0147-5916
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-2819
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10608-007-9153-y

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