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Findings addressing the issue of whether depressed individuals more readily recall negative than positive aspects of their past have been conflicting (Moore, Watts & Williams, 1988; Williams & Scott, 1988). A more consistent finding has been a tendency for depressed individuals to retrieve 'overgeneral' autobiographical memories (Brittlebank, Scott, Williams & Ferrier, 1993; Williams & Scott, 1988). In the current study depressed patients and non-depressed controls were asked to generate specific memories in response to a series of positive and negative cue words. No latency bias in recalling memories to negative cues over memories to positive cues was found. However, the more consistent finding that depressed patients have difficulty generating specific memories was supported.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1111/j.2044-8260.1995.tb01441.x

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

1995-02-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

34

Pages

89 - 92

Total pages

3

Keywords

Adult, Attention, Depressive Disorder, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Life Change Events, Male, Mental Recall, Patient Admission, Reaction Time, Word Association Tests