2003
DOI: 10.1016/s0165-1781(03)00068-4
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A naturalistic visual scanning approach to assess selective attention in major depressive disorder

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Cited by 232 publications
(174 citation statements)
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References 24 publications
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“…On the one hand, similarly to MDD patients (Kellough et al, 2008;Leyman et al, 2011;Sears et al, 2010Sears et al, , 2011Ellis et al, 2011), BD patients in the depressive phase paid less attention to the happy images than the control group, as deduced from the fixation time and the fixation frequency found for these images. On the other hand, although BD patients in the depressive phase paid more attention to sad images than the healthy controls in percent of fixations (27% versus 25%, respectively), this difference did not reach statistical significance-this difference was significant in previous eye-tracking studies in individuals with MDD (Eizenman et al, 2003;Kellough et al, 2008). Thus, an "anhedonic bias" was the most salient disturbance in bipolar depression.…”
Section: Stimulus Category Number Of Fixations (% Of Total)mentioning
confidence: 66%
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“…On the one hand, similarly to MDD patients (Kellough et al, 2008;Leyman et al, 2011;Sears et al, 2010Sears et al, , 2011Ellis et al, 2011), BD patients in the depressive phase paid less attention to the happy images than the control group, as deduced from the fixation time and the fixation frequency found for these images. On the other hand, although BD patients in the depressive phase paid more attention to sad images than the healthy controls in percent of fixations (27% versus 25%, respectively), this difference did not reach statistical significance-this difference was significant in previous eye-tracking studies in individuals with MDD (Eizenman et al, 2003;Kellough et al, 2008). Thus, an "anhedonic bias" was the most salient disturbance in bipolar depression.…”
Section: Stimulus Category Number Of Fixations (% Of Total)mentioning
confidence: 66%
“…Two of the above-cited studies also found that depressed individuals paid more attention to sad stimuli relative to healthy controls (Eizenman et al, 2003;Kellough et al, 2008). However, no study found differences in the eye-gaze patterns related to threatening stimuli between depressed and non-depressed individuals (Armstrong and Olatunji, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…Dysphoric and nondysphoric participants completed a naturalistic visual scanning task (Eizenman et al, 2003) in which gaze behavior was monitored while viewing a series of slides depicting dysphoric, aversive, neutral, and positive words. This task was followed by an incidental recognition task for the displayed words.…”
Section: Combined Cognitive Bias Hypothesis In Depression 16mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This suggests that resources towards initial cognitive processing may be smaller, but once a stimulus is engaged, deeper processing occurs (Siegle, Granholm, Ingram, & Matt, 2001). Furthermore, when the negative stimulus is presented for longer, the effect of pupil diameter is significantly larger with depressed individuals than with anxious individuals (Eizenman et al, 2003). However, with depressed individuals, this effect can only be found for negatively valenced stimuli.…”
Section: Eye Tracking and The Measurement Of Pupil Dilationmentioning
confidence: 99%