Dr. Lukas Kirchner

Postdoctoral Researcher



Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy

University of Marburg



How negative mood hinders belief updating in depression: results from two experimental studies


Journal article


T. Kube, L. Kirchner, Thomas Gärtner, J. Glombiewski
Psychological Medicine, 2021

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Kube, T., Kirchner, L., Gärtner, T., & Glombiewski, J. (2021). How negative mood hinders belief updating in depression: results from two experimental studies. Psychological Medicine.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Kube, T., L. Kirchner, Thomas Gärtner, and J. Glombiewski. “How Negative Mood Hinders Belief Updating in Depression: Results from Two Experimental Studies.” Psychological Medicine (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Kube, T., et al. “How Negative Mood Hinders Belief Updating in Depression: Results from Two Experimental Studies.” Psychological Medicine, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{t2021a,
  title = {How negative mood hinders belief updating in depression: results from two experimental studies},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {Psychological Medicine},
  author = {Kube, T. and Kirchner, L. and Gärtner, Thomas and Glombiewski, J.}
}

Abstract

Abstract Background In two experimental studies, we tested the hypothesis that negative mood would hinder the revision of negative beliefs in response to unexpectedly positive information in depression, whereas positive mood was expected to enhance belief updating. Methods In study 1 (N = 101), we used a subclinical sample to compare the film-based induction of sad v. happy mood with a distraction control group. Subsequently, participants underwent a well-established paradigm to examine intra-individual changes in performance-related expectations after unexpectedly positive performance feedback. In study 2, we applied the belief-updating task from study 1 to an inpatient sample (N = 81) and induced sad v. happy mood via film-clips v. recall of autobiographic events. Results The results of study 1 showed no significant group differences in belief updating; the severity of depressive symptoms was a negative predictor of belief revision, though, and there was a non-significant trend suggesting that the presence of sad mood hindered belief updating in the subgroup of participants with a diagnosed depressive episode. Study 2 revealed that participants updated their expectations significantly less in line with positive feedback when they underwent the induction of negative mood prior to feedback, relative to positive mood. Conclusions By indicating that the presence of negative mood can hinder the revision of negative beliefs in clinically depressed people, our findings suggest that learning from new experiences can be hampered if state negative mood is activated. Thus, interventions relying on learning from novel positive experiences should aim at reducing state negative mood in depression.


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