Back to Search Start Over

Emotion recognition specialization and context-dependent risk of anxiety and depression in adolescents

Authors :
Oldehinkel, AJ
Hartman, CA
Oort, Floor
Nederhof, E
Oldehinkel, AJ
Hartman, CA
Oort, Floor
Nederhof, E
Source :
Oldehinkel , AJ , Hartman , CA , Oort , F & Nederhof , E 2015 , ' Emotion recognition specialization and context-dependent risk of anxiety and depression in adolescents ' , Brain and Behavior , vol. 5 , no. 2 .
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

BackgroundSome adolescents function poorly in apparently benign environments, while others thrive despite hassles and difficulties. The aim of this study was to examine if adolescents with specialized skills in the recognition of either positive or negative emotions have a context-dependent risk of developing an anxiety or depressive disorder during adolescence, depending on exposure to positive or harsh parenting. MethodsData came from a large prospective Dutch population study (N=1539). At age 11, perceived parental rejection and emotional warmth were measured by questionnaire, and emotion recognition skills by means of a reaction-time task. Lifetime diagnoses of anxiety and depressive disorders were assessed at about age 19, using a standardized diagnostic interview. ResultsAdolescents who were specialized in the recognition of positive emotions had a relatively high probability to develop an anxiety disorder when exposed to parental rejection (B-specialization*rejection=0.23, P<0.01) and a relatively low probability in response to parental emotional warmth (B-specialization*warmth=-0.24, P=0.01), while the opposite pattern was found for specialists in negative emotions. The effect of parental emotional warmth on depression onset was likewise modified by emotion recognition specialization (B=-0.13, P=0.03), but the effect of parental rejection was not (B=0.02, P=0.72). In general, the relative advantage of specialists in negative emotions was restricted to fairly uncommon negative conditions. ConclusionsOur results suggest that there is no unequivocal relation between parenting behaviors and the probability to develop an anxiety or depressive disorder in adolescence, and that emotion recognition specialization may be a promising way to distinguish between various types of context-dependent reaction patterns.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Oldehinkel , AJ , Hartman , CA , Oort , F & Nederhof , E 2015 , ' Emotion recognition specialization and context-dependent risk of anxiety and depression in adolescents ' , Brain and Behavior , vol. 5 , no. 2 .
Notes :
application/pdf, und
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1313618664
Document Type :
Electronic Resource