AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how emotional fluctuations relate to depression in teens, focusing on those at risk versus those currently depressed.
  • It involved 147 adolescents aged 14 to 17, assessing their positive and negative emotions multiple times a day over a week.
  • Findings indicated that depressed adolescents had more consistent negative emotions and less positive feelings, while no significant differences were found between never-depressed youth at different risk levels, highlighting the need for further research on preventive measures.

Article Abstract

Alterations in dynamic affective processes are associated with dysregulated affect and depression. Although depression is often associated with heightened inertia (i.e., greater moment-to-moment correlation) and variability (i.e., larger departures from typical levels) of affect in adults, less is known about whether altered affect dynamics are present in youth at risk for depression. This study investigated the association of clinical depression and depression risk with the inertia and variability of positive and negative affect in a sample of youth at varying risk for depression. Our sample included 147 adolescents aged 14 to 17, categorized into three groups: never-depressed lower-risk, never-depressed higher-risk (based on maternal history of depression), and currently depressed adolescents. Adolescents completed ecological momentary assessments of positive and negative affect up to seven times per day for a week. Multilevel models and ANOVAs were used to examine associations of affective inertia and variability with adolescent depression and risk based on maternal history, controlling for average affect. Depressed adolescents showed more inert and diminished positive affect, and more variable and elevated negative affect compared to lower- and higher-risk youth, though associations attenuated after controlling for average affect. No differences were identified between never-depressed higher-risk and lower-risk youth. Additional longitudinal studies are needed to evaluate whether altered affect dynamics in daily life precede depression onset to understand their utility for developing preventive interventions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11321708PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.xjmad.2024.100069DOI Listing

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