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The Influence of Depression on the Processing of Personal Attributes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

P. I. Clifford*
Affiliation:
Mental Illness Unit, Mary Sheridan House, London
D. R. Hemsley
Affiliation:
Psychology Department, Institute of Psychiatry, London
*
Mary Sheridan House, St Thomas' Street, London SEI 9RY

Abstract

Depressed, schizophrenic and normal subjects were tested for incidental recall and recognition of lists of positive and negative personal attributes. It was hypothesised that depressives would show a deficit in recall and recognition of words of which they had been asked a self-referential encoding question, but would show equivalent performance to controls on words of which they had been asked an other-referential, semantic or structural encoding question. The experiment was designed to enable a decision to be made between two possible explanations of the expected deficit: Davis's (1979) suggestion that it is due to disorganisation of the self-schema in depression, and the hypothesis of Beck at al (1979) that depression is characterised by the predominance of a negative self-schema. The expected deficit was observed on the recall but not on the recognition task. However, the precise pattern of the results raises problems for both of the above interpretations, and alternative explanations are considered.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1987 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 

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