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Interpretation Bias Training in Depressed Adolescents: Near- and Far-Transfer Effects
Authors:Joelle LeMoult  Natalie Colich  Jutta Joormann  Manpreet K. Singh  Caitlin Eggleston  Ian H. Gotlib
Affiliation:1.University of British Columbia,Vancouver,Canada;2.Stanford University,Stanford,USA;3.Yale University,New Haven,USA;4.University of California,Berkeley,USA
Abstract:Depressed adolescents are characterized by negative interpretation biases. Although investigators have used cognitive bias modification for interpretation (CBM-I) to experimentally manipulate interpretation biases in depressed adults, the near- and far-transfer effects are not well understood in adolescents diagnosed with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). In this study, we extend previous research by investigating the near- and far-transfer effects of 6 sessions of Positive versus Neutral CBM-I on independent measures of interpretation bias (near-transfer effects) and on attention biases and clinical symptoms (far-transfer effects) in a sample of adolescents with MDD (n = 46). At post-training, adolescents who received Positive CBM-I interpreted ambiguous scenarios more positively than did participants who received Neutral CBM-I, providing evidence of training effectiveness. There was no evidence, however, of near- or far-transfer effects. These findings raise concerns about the malleability of interpretation biases in adolescent depression and suggest that further work is needed to establish the clinical utility of CBM-I for adolescents with MDD.
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