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Depressive realism and the effect of intertrial interval on judgements of zero, positive, and negative contingencies

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posted on 2012-10-01, 13:53 authored by Rachel M. Msetfi, Robin A. Murphy, Jane Simpson
In three experiments we tested how the spacing of trials during acquisition of zero, positive, and negative event–outcome contingencies differentially affected depressed and nondepressed students’ judgements. Experiment 1 found that nondepressed participants’ judgements of zero contingencies increased with longer intertrial intervals (ITIs) but not simply longer procedure durations. Depressed groups’ judgements were not sensitive to either manipulation, producing an effect known as depressive realism only with long ITIs. Experiments 2 and 3 tested predictions of Cheng’s (1997) Power PC theory and the Rescorla–Wagner (1972) model, that the increase in context exposure experienced during the ITI might influence judgements most with negative contingencies and least with positive contingencies. Results suggested that depressed people were less sensitive to differences in contingency and contextual exposure. Together we propose that a context-processing difference between depressed and nondepressed people removes any objective notion of “realism” that was originally employed to explain the depressive realism effect (Alloy & Abramson, 1979).

History

Publication

Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology;60(3), pp. 461-481

Publisher

Psychology Press

Note

peer-reviewed

Rights

Copyright © 2007. Depressive realism and the effect of intertrial interval on judgements of zero, positive, and negative contingencies. From Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. Reproduced by permission of Taylor and Francis Group, LLC, a division of Informa plc.

Language

English

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