Allan Lorraine G, Siegel Shepard, Hannah Samuel
Department of Psychology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2007 Mar;60(3):482-95. doi: 10.1080/17470210601002686.
In one form of a contingency judgement task individuals must judge the relationship between an action and an outcome. There are reports that depressed individuals are more accurate than are non-depressed individuals in this task. In particular, nondepressed individuals are influenced by manipulations that affect the salience of the outcome, especially outcome probability. They overestimate a contingency if the probability of an outcome is high--the "outcome-density effect". In contrast, depressed individuals display little or no outcome-density effect. This apparent knack for depressives not to be misled by outcome density in their contingency judgements has been termed "depressive realism", and the absence of an outcome-density effect has led to the characterization of depressives as "sadder but wiser". We present a critical summary of the depressive realism literature and provide a novel interpretation of the phenomenon. We suggest that depressive realism may be understood from a psychophysical analysis of contingency judgements.
在一种形式的偶然性判断任务中,个体必须判断一种行为与一种结果之间的关系。有报告称,在这项任务中,抑郁个体比非抑郁个体更准确。特别是,非抑郁个体受到影响结果显著性的操纵的影响,尤其是结果概率。如果结果的概率很高,他们就会高估一种偶然性——“结果密度效应”。相比之下,抑郁个体几乎没有或没有表现出结果密度效应。抑郁个体在偶然性判断中不被结果密度误导的这种明显诀窍被称为“抑郁现实主义”,而没有结果密度效应导致将抑郁个体描述为“更悲伤但更明智”。我们对抑郁现实主义文献进行了批判性总结,并对这一现象提供了一种新颖的解释。我们认为,可以从对偶然性判断的心理物理学分析来理解抑郁现实主义。