Psychometric Properties Of A Novel Affective Bias Task And Its Application In Clinical And Nonclinical Populations
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-18-2024
Published In
Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience And Neuroimaging
Abstract
To mitigate limitations of self-reported mood assessments, we introduce a novel affective bias task. The task quantifies instantaneous emotional state by leveraging the phenomenon of affective bias, in which people interpret external emotional stimuli in a manner consistent with their current emotional state. This study establishes task stability in measuring and tracking depressive symptoms in clinical and nonclinical populations. Initial assessment in a large nonclinical sample established normative ratings. Depressive symptoms were measured and compared with task performance in a nonclinical sample, as well as in a clinical cohort of individuals who were undergoing surgical evaluation for severe epilepsy. In both cohorts, a stronger negative affective bias was associated with a higher Beck Depression Inventory-II score. The affective bias task exhibited high stability and interrater reliability as well as construct validity in predicting depression levels in both cohorts, suggesting that the task is a reliable proxy for mood and a diagnostic tool for detecting depressive symptoms.
Keywords
Depression, Epilepsy monitoring, Facial emotion recognition
Recommended Citation
P. Kalva, K. Kanja, Brian A. Metzger, X. Fan, B. Cui, J. Magnotti, M. Mocchi, R. Mathura, and K. R. Bijanki.
(2024).
"Psychometric Properties Of A Novel Affective Bias Task And Its Application In Clinical And Nonclinical Populations".
Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience And Neuroimaging.
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2024.07.004
https://works.swarthmore.edu/fac-psychology/1199