Title of article
Emotional bias in unaffected siblings of patients with bipolar I disorder
Author/Authors
Brand، نويسنده , , Jesse G. and Goldberg، نويسنده , , Terry E. and Gunawardane، نويسنده , , Nisali and Gopin، نويسنده , , Chaya B. and Powers، نويسنده , , Robyn L. and Malhotra، نويسنده , , Anil K. and Burdick، نويسنده , , Katherine E.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
6
From page
1053
To page
1058
Abstract
Background
r disorder (BPD) research has identified a number of neurocognitive deficits as potential vulnerability markers; however, very few studies have focused on patterns of performance on affective processing tasks (e.g. affective Go/No-Go tasks) which may be more closely tied to the pathophysiology of the illness. We previously reported that stable BPD patients demonstrate a response bias toward negative affective stimuli as compared with healthy controls and schizophrenia patients. The goal of the current study was to expand upon these prior findings to investigate these patterns in the unaffected siblings of BPD patients.
s
ective Go/No-Go test was used to evaluate inhibitory response to negatively-valenced, positively-valenced, and neutral stimuli in 20 unaffected siblings of bipolar I patients versus 20 healthy controls. Accuracy (d′) and response bias (beta) served as dependent variables in a series of repeated measures ANCOVAs.
s
nd a non-significant main effect for group when comparing accuracy performance (d′) on the affective Go/No-Go of unaffected siblings versus healthy controls. However, very similar to the pattern that we previously reported in stable BPD patients, unaffected siblings showed a response bias (beta) toward negatively-valenced stimuli versus healthy controls [F = 3.81; p = 0.03].
tions
sample size.
sions
rrent results extend our recent work which suggested that stable bipolar patients attend more readily to negative target stimuli than do schizophrenic or healthy subjects. These data, indicating that unaffected siblings also demonstrate an affective processing bias, implicate this task as a potential endophenotype in BPD.
Keywords
Endophenotype , unaffected siblings , Affective bias , Affective Go/No-Go
Journal title
Journal of Affective Disorders
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Journal of Affective Disorders
Record number
1432951
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