Attentional Bias in Older Adults with Non-Clinical Depression: An Eye-Tracking Study.

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q4 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Jing Yuan, Yina Chen, Xinyi Yuan, Yuchen Zhang, Yan Wang, Zejun Liu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Cognitive models of depression assert that attentional biases play an important role in the maintenance of depression. However, few studies have explored attentional bias in depressed older adults, and no consistent conclusions have been reached.

Methods: In the current study, we investigated attentional bias in older adults with non-clinical depression. Older adults aged over 60 with non-clinical depression and without depression were instructed to perform a free viewing task while their eye movements were tracked.

Results: The results showed that, compared to older adults without depression, non-clinically depressed older adults had longer total fixation durations and a greater number of fixations on sad stimuli. Moreover, non-depressed older adults exhibited a preference for pleasant images, whereas this effect was not observed in older adults with non-clinical depression.

Conclusion: This study suggested that non-clinically depressed older adults have attentional bias, which is manifested as increased attention to sad stimuli and decreased attention to pleasant stimuli.The current study has functional and potential functional implications.

非临床抑郁症老年人的注意偏差:眼动追踪研究
背景:抑郁症的认知模型认为,注意偏差在抑郁症的维持过程中起着重要作用。然而,很少有研究探讨抑郁症老年人的注意偏差,也没有得出一致的结论:在本研究中,我们调查了患有非临床抑郁症的老年人的注意偏差。我们让 60 岁以上患有非临床抑郁症的老年人和未患抑郁症的老年人完成一项自由观看任务,同时跟踪他们的眼球运动:结果表明,与没有抑郁症的老年人相比,非临床抑郁症老年人对悲伤刺激的总固定持续时间更长,固定次数更多。此外,非抑郁症老年人表现出对愉快图像的偏好,而非临床抑郁症老年人则没有观察到这种效应:本研究表明,非临床抑郁症老年人存在注意偏差,表现为对悲伤刺激的注意增加,而对愉快刺激的注意减少。
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来源期刊
Experimental Aging Research
Experimental Aging Research 医学-老年医学
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
68
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Experimental Aging Research is a life span developmental and aging journal dealing with research on the aging process from a psychological and psychobiological perspective. It meets the need for a scholarly journal with refereed scientific papers dealing with age differences and age changes at any point in the adult life span. Areas of major focus include experimental psychology, neuropsychology, psychobiology, work research, ergonomics, and behavioral medicine. Original research, book reviews, monographs, and papers covering special topics are published.
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