The role of cognitive biases and negative life events in predicting later depressive symptoms in children and adolescents

Author:

Platt Belinda1ORCID,Sfärlea Anca1,Löchner Johanna12ORCID,Salemink Elske3,Schulte-Körne Gerd1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, University Hospital LMU Munich, Munich, Germany

2. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, University Hospital, Tübingen, Germany

3. Department of Clinical Psychology, Utrecht University, The Netherlands

Abstract

Aims Cognitive models propose that negative cognitive biases in attention (AB) and interpretation (IB) contribute to the onset of depression. This is the first prospective study to test this hypothesis in a sample of youth with no mental disorder. Methods Participants were 61 youth aged 9–14 years with no mental disorder. At baseline (T1) we measured AB (passive-viewing task), IB (scrambled sentences task) and self-report depressive symptoms. Thirty months later (T2) we measured onset of mental disorder, depressive symptoms and life events (parent- and child-report). The sample included children of parents with ( n = 31) and without ( n = 30) parental depression. Results Symptoms of depression at T2 were predicted by IB ( ß = .35, p = .01) but not AB ( ß = .05, p = .72) at T1. This effect was strongest for children who experienced multiple negative life events (F2,48 = 6.0, p = .018, ΔR2 = .08). IB did not predict depressive symptoms at T2 over-and-above the effect of depressive symptoms at T1 ( ß = .21, p = .13). Discussion These findings suggest that IB (but not AB) plays an important role in the aetiology of depression. Modifying IB may have a preventive effect on youth depression, particularly for youth who experience negative life events. This prospective study provides important foundations for future experimental studies.

Funder

LMU Gender Mentorung Prorgramme

Hans und Klementia Langmatz Stiftung

"Förderprogramm für Forschung und Lehre" of the Medical Faculty of the LMU

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology

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