The cognitive specificity of learned helplessness and depression deficits: The role of self-focused cognitions |
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Authors: | Mario Mikulincer Hananyah Glaubman Elisheva Ben-artzi Simona Grossman |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pyschology , Bar Ilan University , Ramat Gan, Israel |
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Abstract: | Abstract Four experiments assessed similarities and differences in learned helplessness and depression-related deficits in cognitive performance and self-focused cognitions. Subjects answered the Beck Depression Inventory (Beck, Ward, Mendelson, Mock, & Erbaugh, 1961), were exposed to no-feedback or failure in unsolvable problems, and their response time in a digit comparison task (with or without a memory component, with different number of digits, and different number of mental transformations) and self-focused cognitions were assessed. Learned helplessness and depression deficits were found in a memory task, and the deficits increased with the number of digits. Depression deficits also increased with the number of transformations, and were also found in the no-memory/two transformation condition. Finally, task-related worries were related to learned helplessness deficits, and task-irrelevant thoughts were related to depression deficits. Findings were discussed in terms of the cognitive specificity of learned helplessness and depression deficits. |
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Keywords: | Learned helplessness depression off-task cognitions cognitive load memory |
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