Do markers of daily affect mediate associations between interpretation bias and depressive symptoms? A longitudinal study of early adolescents

Author:

Grocott Bronwen1ORCID,Battaglini Ashley M.1ORCID,Jopling Ellen1,Tracy Alison1,Rnic Katerina1,Sanchez‐Lopez Alvaro2,LeMoult Joelle1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology University of British Columbia Vancouver Canada

2. Department of Clinical Psychology Complutense University of Madrid Pozuelo de Alarcon Spain

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionEarly adolescence represents a time of heightened vulnerability for depression. Negative interpretation biases have been associated with increases in depressive symptoms during this developmental period; however, the mechanisms underlying the association between interpretation biases and depression remain poorly understood. Cognitive theories posit that interpretation biases give rise to depression by modulating daily affect, particularly in the context of stress. However, this has not yet been directly examined. The present study tested affect intensity and instability as mechanisms linking negative interpretation biases with change in adolescent depressive symptoms.MethodsNinety‐four adolescents (aged 11–13 years; 51% boys) from Vancouver, Canada, were recruited for this longitudinal study. At baseline (Time 1), participants self‐reported depressive symptoms and completed the Scrambled Sentences Task to assess negative interpretation biases. Next, participants completed daily diaries to assess positive affect (PA) and negative affect (NA) during a naturalistic stressor—the first 2 weeks of high school (Time 2). Finally, participants self‐reported depressive symptoms 3 months later (Time 3). Path models were conducted to test whether PA and NA intensity and instability mediated prospective associations between negative interpretation biases and depressive symptom changes.ResultsAlthough NA intensity, NA instability, and PA instability predicted increases in depressive symptoms, only NA intensity mediated associations between interpretation biases and symptom changes. Neither PA intensity nor instability mediated these associations.ConclusionsElevated daily NA represents a specific mechanism through which stronger negative interpretation biases predict increases in depressive symptoms in adolescence.

Funder

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research

University of British Columbia

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Social Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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