期刊论文详细信息
Frontiers in Psychology
The effect of emotion and reward contingencies on relational memory in major depression: an eye-movement study with follow-up
Gergely Drotos1  Laszlo Vecsei2  Zoltan Janka3  Anita Must3  Viola Luca Nemeth3  Nora Greminger3  Gergo Csete3 
[1] Hungarian Academy of Sciences;MTA-SZTE Neuroscience Research Group;University of Szeged;
关键词: Eye-tracking;    facial emotion;    major depression;    relational memory;    virtual monetary reward and loss;   
DOI  :  10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01849
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

BackgroundEpisodic memory disturbances were found to constitute a potential trait marker for major depression (MD). The recall of positive or rewarding information in a relational context is specifically impaired. Eye-movement recording constitutes a novel, direct approach to examine implicit memory performance. Here we aimed to assess the effect of emotional context and implicit virtual monetary reward or loss on viewing patterns in association with relational memory in a 6-months follow-up study in MD.Methods and materialsTwenty-eight patients with MD and 30 healthy participants were trained to associate a face (happy/sad/neutral) with a background scene. After each pair a virtual monetary reward or loss appeared briefly. During testing, scenes were presented as a cue and then overlaid with three previously studied faces. Participants were asked to recall the matching face if present (Match trials), with eye-movements and subsequent forced-choice recognition being recorded. ResultsExplicit recognition of the matching face was impaired in the MD group as compared to controls. In correlation with this, viewing of the matching face was significantly reduced in the MD group. We found a significant interaction of group (MD vs HC) with the relational memory condition (Match and Non-match), facial emotion and monetary reward and loss. MD patients attended longer to previously rewarded stimuli, but significantly less to sad faces in the Match condition. The relational memory impairment persisted at follow-up and correlated with symptom severity both at baseline and follow-up. Viewing patterns associated with previous virtual reward were associated with clinical symptoms at follow-up.ConclusionsOur current results provide novel evidence for a specific relational memory impairment in MD as supported by abnormal eye-movement behavior and a deficit in explicit recognition. MD patients showed an attentional bias to rewarded stimuli and decreased viewing of sad faces when relational memory information was present.

【 授权许可】

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