Depression, confidence, and decision: Evidence against depressive realism

Tiffany Fu, Wilma Koutstaal, Cynthia H.Y. Fu, Lucia Poon, Anthony J. Cleare

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

38 Scopus citations

Abstract

This research examined how retrospective self-assessments of performance are affected by major depression. To test the validity of the depressive realism versus the selective processing hypotheses, aggregate posttest performance estimates (PTPEs) were obtained from clinically depressed patients and an age-matched comparison group across 4 decision tasks (object recognition, general knowledge, social judgment, and line-length judgment). As expected on the basis of previous findings, both groups were underconfident in their PTPEs, consistently underestimating the percentage of questions they had answered correctly. Contrary to depressive realism, and in partial support of the selective processing account, this underconfidence effect was not reduced but modestly exacerbated in the depressed patients. Further, whereas the PTPEs of the comparison group exceeded that expected on the basis of chance alone those of the depressed individuals did not. The results provide no support for the depressive realism account and suggest that negative biases contribute to metacognitive information processing in major depression.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)243-252
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment
Volume27
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2005

Keywords

  • Bias
  • Cognitive therapy
  • Depressive realism
  • Overconfidence
  • Underconfidence

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