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      Positive Imagery Cognitive Bias Modification in Treatment-Seeking Patients with Major Depression in Iran: A Pilot Study

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          Abstract

          Cognitive bias modification paradigms training positive mental imagery and interpretation (imagery CBM-I) hold promise for treatment innovation in depression. However, depression is a global health problem and interventions need to translate across settings and cultures. The current pilot study investigated the impact of 1 week of daily imagery CBM-I in treatment-seeking individuals with major depression in outpatient psychiatry clinics in Iran. Further, it tested the importance of instructions to imagine the positive training materials. Finally, we examined the effects of this training on imagery vividness. Thirty-nine participants were randomly allocated to imagery CBM-I, a non-imagery control program, or a no treatment control group. Imagery CBM-I led to greater improvements in depressive symptoms, interpretive bias, and imagery vividness than either control condition at post-treatment ( n = 13 per group), and improvements were maintained at 2-week follow-up ( n = 8 per group). This pilot study provides first preliminary evidence that imagery CBM-I could provide positive clinical outcomes in an Iranian psychiatric setting, and further that the imagery component of the training may play a crucial role.

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          Cognition and depression: current status and future directions.

          Cognitive theories of depression posit that people's thoughts, inferences, attitudes, and interpretations, and the way in which they attend to and recall information, can increase their risk for depression. Three mechanisms have been implicated in the relation between biased cognitive processing and the dysregulation of emotion in depression: inhibitory processes and deficits in working memory, ruminative responses to negative mood states and negative life events, and the inability to use positive and rewarding stimuli to regulate negative mood. In this review, we present a contemporary characterization of depressive cognition and discuss how different cognitive processes are related not only to each other, but also to emotion dysregulation, the hallmark feature of depression. We conclude that depression is characterized by increased elaboration of negative information, by difficulties disengaging from negative material, and by deficits in cognitive control when processing negative information. We discuss treatment implications of these conclusions and argue that the study of cognitive aspects of depression must be broadened by investigating neural and genetic factors that are related to cognitive dysfunction in this disorder. Such integrative investigations should help us gain a more comprehensive understanding of how cognitive and biological factors interact to affect the onset, maintenance, and course of depression.
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            Visual imagery differences in the recall of pictures.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                ht_17f@yahoo.com
                Journal
                Cognit Ther Res
                Cognit Ther Res
                Cognitive Therapy and Research
                Springer US (Boston )
                0147-5916
                1573-2819
                7 February 2014
                7 February 2014
                2014
                : 38
                : 132-145
                Affiliations
                [ ]Isfahan Science and Research Branch, Islamic Azad University, Isfahan, Iran
                [ ]MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, UK
                [ ]Department of Psychology, University of Isfahan, Isfahan, Iran
                [ ]Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran
                [ ]Department of Statistics, University of Isfahan, Isfahan, Iran
                Article
                9598
                10.1007/s10608-014-9598-8
                3951961
                24634554
                43a659d1-496f-4512-85cf-0cead0e87574
                © The Author(s) 2014

                Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.

                History
                Categories
                Original Article
                Custom metadata
                © Springer Science+Business Media New York 2014

                Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry
                mental imagery,cognitive bias modification,depression,computerized interventions,interpretive bias

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