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Emotional responding in depression: Distinctions in the time course of emotion
Authors:Erin K. Moran  Neera Mehta  Ann M. Kring
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology , University of California , Berkeley , CA , USA ekmoran@berkeley.edu;3. Department of Psychiatry , Northwestern University , Chicago , IL , USA;4. Department of Psychology , University of California , Berkeley , CA , USA
Abstract:The current studies were designed to investigate if the emotion context insensitivity hypothesis (ECI; Rottenberg & Gotlib, 2004) is applicable across the time course of emotion. Recent affective science research has pointed to the importance of considering anticipation and maintenance of emotion. In the current studies, we assessed emotion responses among college students with depression symptoms in anticipation of, during, and after an emotional picture using the emotion modulated startle paradigm. People with and without depression symptoms did not differ in blink magnitude in anticipation of emotional pictures suggesting that some anticipatory processes may not be impaired by depression symptoms. In contrast, individuals with depression symptoms did not exhibit blink magnitudes that varied by valence, either during viewing or after the pictures were removed from view. These findings suggest that ECI is relevant not only for those diagnosed with major depressive disorder, but also for people with depression symptoms that may not cross the diagnostic threshold. These data also point to the importance of considering the time course of emotion to better understand emotional deficits in individuals with differing levels of depression symptoms. Identifying where emotion goes awry across the time course of emotion can help inform treatment development.
Keywords:Depression  Startle modulation  Emotion  Dysphoria  Anticipation  Maintenance
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