AI Article Synopsis

  • Optimistic processing of social feedback can help maintain positive self-views and healthy relationships, while a lack of this optimism in conditions like depression and social anxiety may reinforce negative self-views and symptoms.
  • Research on how individuals with depression and social anxiety respond to social feedback is limited, but emerging data indicates that those with these conditions tend to have less optimistic responses.
  • The study utilized large datasets to show that lower levels of optimism were linked to more negative social feedback sensitivity in social anxiety and a reduced response to positive feedback in depression, suggesting potential avenues for personalized treatment.

Article Abstract

Processing social feedback optimistically may maintain positive self-beliefs and stable social relationships. Conversely, a lack of this optimistic bias in depression and social anxiety may perpetuate negative self-beliefs and maintain symptoms. Research investigating this mechanism is scarce, however, and the mechanisms by which depressed and socially anxious individuals respond to social evaluation may also differ. Using a range of computational approaches in two large datasets (mega-analysis of previous studies, n = 450; pre-registered replication study, n = 807), we investigated how depression (PHQ-9) and social anxiety (BFNE) symptoms related to social evaluation learning in a computerized task. Optimistic bias (better learning of positive relative to negative evaluations) was found to be negatively associated with depression and social anxiety. Structural equation models suggested this reflected a heightened sensitivity to negative social feedback in social anxiety, whereas in depression it co-existed with a blunted response to positive social feedback. Computational belief-based learning models further suggested that reduced optimism was driven by less positive trait-like self-beliefs in both depression and social anxiety, with some evidence for a general blunting in belief updating in depression. Recognizing such transdiagnostic similarities and differences in social evaluation learning across disorders may inform approaches to personalizing treatment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11438955PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-72749-6DOI Listing

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