Cognitive disengagement syndrome and depressive symptoms in early adolescents: Examining the moderating role of a negative interpretation bias
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry2025Vol. 66(9), pp. 1366–1375
Citations Over TimeTop 16% of 2025 papers
Abstract
Negative interpretation bias strengthens the association between CDS symptoms and depressive symptoms when depressive symptoms are rated by caregivers, but not by adolescents. Findings highlight the importance of multiple informants when examining CDS and internalizing symptoms, with a need for longitudinal research to examine CDS and interpretation bias in relation to the progression and maintenance of depression across adolescence.
Related Papers
- → There’s more to anxiety than meets the eye: Isolating threat-related attentional engagement and disengagement biases.(2013)55 cited
- → Attentional bias to food during free and instructed viewing in anorexia nervosa: An eye tracking study(2023)14 cited
- → Pinpointing Mechanisms of a Mechanistic Treatment: Dissociable Roles for Overt and Covert Attentional Processes in Acute and Long-Term Outcomes Following Attention-Bias Modification(2019)14 cited
- → Influence of hunger on attentional engagement with and disengagement from pictorial food cues in women with a healthy weight(2020)18 cited
- → Attentional bias for body and food in eating disorders: Slowed disengagement, speeded detection, or both?(2008)5 cited