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Objective: Memory bias to emotion- and illness-related information plays a prominent role in many mental disorders, particularly major depressive disorder, anxiety disorders and somatoform disorder. The current study aimed to investigate memory bias in different mental disorders by using neutral, emotionally valenced and illness-related word stimuli in a directed forgetting task. Methods: Seventy-eight inpatients from a university-based psychosomatic hospital participated in the study. The item method of the directed forgetting task was used, in which participants are instructed to either forget or remember each item immediately after it has been presented. Memory performance was tested with a free recall test. Overall, 36 words were presented – 6 from each of 6 categories: neutral, negative, positive, illness related (‘somatoform’), depression related, and anxiety related. Three words of each category were to be remembered and 3 were to be forgotten. Results: Independently of the patients’ diagnoses, we found that most patients had relative difficulties remembering anxiety- and depression-related words, compared to neutral words, when they were instructed to remember them. By contrast, in the ‘instructed forgetting’ condition, patients showed deficits in the ability to forget illness-related stimuli relative to neutral material. These effects were unspecific with regard to diagnosis. Conclusions: The results in the ‘instructed remembering’ condition might be interpreted in the context of cognitive avoidance instead of a memory bias. In the ‘instructed forgetting’ condition, it appeared that illness-related words were more difficult to suppress compared to the other word types, which could explain the observed memory bias.
Psychopathology – Karger
Published: Jan 1, 2012
Keywords: Depression; Anxiety; Somatization; Memory bias; Directed forgetting
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