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Affective forecasting and self-rated symptoms of depression,anxiety, and hypomania: Evidence for a dysphoric forecasting bias
Authors:Michael Hoerger  Stuart W Quirk  Benjamin P Chapman  Paul R Duberstein
Institution:1. Rochester Healthcare Decision-making Group and Department of Psychiatry , University of Rochester Medical Center , Rochester , NY , USA michael_hoerger@urmc.rochester.edu;3. Department of Psychology , Central Michigan University , Mount Pleasant , MI , USA;4. Rochester Healthcare Decision-making Group and Department of Psychiatry , University of Rochester Medical Center , Rochester , NY , USA
Abstract:Emerging research has examined individual differences in affective forecasting; however, we are aware of no published study to date linking psychopathology symptoms to affective forecasting problems. Pitting cognitive theory against depressive realism theory, we examined whether dysphoria was associated with negatively biased affective forecasts or greater accuracy. Participants (n=325) supplied predicted and actual emotional reactions for three days surrounding an emotionally evocative relational event, Valentine's Day. Predictions were made a month prior to the holiday. Consistent with cognitive theory, we found evidence for a dysphoric forecasting bias—the tendency of individuals in dysphoric states to overpredict negative emotional reactions to future events. The dysphoric forecasting bias was robust across ratings of positive and negative affect, forecasts for pleasant and unpleasant scenarios, continuous and categorical operationalisations of dysphoria, and three time points of observation. Similar biases were not observed in analyses examining the independent effects of anxiety and hypomania. Findings provide empirical evidence for the long-assumed influence of depressive symptoms on future expectations. The present investigation has implications for affective forecasting studies examining information-processing constructs, decision making, and broader domains of psychopathology.
Keywords:Affective forecasting  Depression  Dysphoria  Anxiety  Hypomania  Impact bias
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