4.7 Article

Depression is related to an absence of optimistically biased belief updating about future life events

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE
Volume 44, Issue 3, Pages 579-592

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0033291713001074

Keywords

Belief updating; bias; depression; information processing; optimism

Funding

  1. Senior Investigator Award [098362/Z/12/Z]
  2. Max Planck Award
  3. Wellcome Trust Career Development Fellowship
  4. Wellcome Trust [091593/Z/10/Z]

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Background When challenged with information about the future, healthy participants show an optimistically biased updating pattern, taking desirable information more into account than undesirable information. However, it is unknown how patients suffering from major depressive disorder (MDD), who express pervasive pessimistic beliefs, update their beliefs when receiving information about their future. Here we tested whether an optimistically biased information processing pattern found in healthy individuals is absent in MDD patients. Method MDD patients (n=18; 13 medicated; eight with co-morbid anxiety disorder) and healthy controls (n=19) estimated their personal probability of experiencing 70 adverse life events. After each estimate participants were presented with the average probability of the event occurring to a person living in the same sociocultural environment. This information could be desirable (i.e. average probability better than expected) or undesirable (i.e. average probability worse than expected). To assess how desirable versus undesirable information influenced beliefs, participants estimated their personal probability of experiencing the 70 events a second time. Results Healthy controls showed an optimistic bias in updating, that is they changed their beliefs more toward desirable versus undesirable information. Overall, this optimistic bias was absent in MDD patients. Symptom severity correlated with biased updating: more severely depressed individuals showed a more pessimistic updating pattern. Furthermore, MDD patients estimated the probability of experiencing adverse life events as higher than healthy controls. Conclusions Our findings raise the intriguing possibility that optimistically biased updating of expectations about one's personal future is associated with mental health.

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