4.4 Article

The contextual goal dependent attentional flexibility (CoGoDAF) framework: A new approach to attention bias in depression

Journal

BEHAVIOUR RESEARCH AND THERAPY
Volume 167, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.brat.2023.104354

Keywords

Context; Flexibility; Attention; Goals; Depression

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Successful adaptation to the environment requires prioritizing emotional information relevant to the current situational demands. However, an attention bias for negative information sometimes becomes maladaptive, especially in affective disorders like depression. This paper proposes a novel and integrative view of aberrant affective attention patterns in depression, considering contextual features and attention prioritization towards goal-relevant emotional stimuli. The implications of this framework for empirical, clinical, and interventional research are discussed.
Successful adaptation to the environment requires attentional prioritization of emotional information relevant to the current situational demands. Accordingly, the presence of an attention bias (AB) for both positive and negative information may allow preferential processing of stimuli in line with the current situational goals. However, AB for negative information sometimes becomes maladaptive, being antithetical to the current adaptive needs and goals of an individual, such as in the case of affective disorders such as depression. Although difficulties in flexible shifting between emotional stimuli in depression have increasingly become a topic of discussion in the field, an integrative approach towards biased versus flexible emotional attentional processes remains absent. In the present paper, we advance a novel and integrative view of conceptualizing potentially aberrant affective attention patterns in depression as a function of the current contextual features. We propose that flexible emotional attention takes place as a result of attention prioritization towards goal-relevant emotional stimuli depending upon the current context of the individual. Specifically, the roles of context, distal and proximal goals, and approach and avoidance motivation processes are considered in a unified manner. The empirical, clinical, and interventional implications of this integrative framework provide a roadmap for future psychological and neurobiological experimental and translational research.

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