4.7 Article

Behavioral and electrophysiological markers of selective attention in children of parents with a history of depression

Journal

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 60, Issue 10, Pages 1131-1138

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2006.02.036

Keywords

selective attention; childhood-onset depression; ERP; affective context; Posner paradigm

Funding

  1. NIMH NIH HHS [MH 56193] Funding Source: Medline

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Background Individual differences in selective attention may play a role in moderating psychological vulnerabilities by shaping the ability to self-regulate emotion. Children of parents with childhood-onset depression (COD) are at increased risk for socioemotional difficulties. This study examined potential differences in selective attention as a function of parental COD. Methods: Children (n = 33, ages 6 to 10) participated in a Posner cued attention task, tinder neutral and affective conditions. Behavioral (reaction time [RT]; errors) and event-related potential (EPP) data were collected during the task. Results: Performance in the Posner task under the affective condition was marked by significant decreases in RTs, an increase in errors, and an increased validity effect (difference in RTs to the cued vs. uncued trials) relative to performance under neutral conditions. Children qfparems with COD were slower in their response rates compared with control children. The at-risk children also showed larger P3 and slow wave amplitudes in anterior scalp sites, particularly during the affective Posner task. Conclusions: These data suggest that there are subtle deficits in selective attention among the of requiring that they engage more processing resources to perform effectively. This may affect their ability to adequately regulate emotion under stress.

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