"Participants also performed a 0-back task with the same emotional stimuli to serve as a control for perceptual processing. After transforming reaction times to control for baseline group differences, depressed and nondepressed participants exhibited biases in updating emotional content that reflects the tendency to keep negative information and positive information, respectively, active in WM. Compared with controls, depressed participants were both slower to disengage from sad stimuli and faster to disengage from happy facial expressions. In contrast, nondepressed controls took longer to disengage from happy stimuli than from neutral or sad stimuli," wrote S.M. Levens and colleagues, Stanford University, Department of Psychology.
CITATION STYLE
Anonymous. (2010). Psychology and Psychiatry; Reports outline psychology and psychiatry research from Stanford University, Department of Psychology. Psychology & Psychiatry Journal, 190. Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/818322110?accountid=136549
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