2006
DOI: 10.1080/02699930500220066
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Anxiety and depression: Past, present, and future events

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Cited by 136 publications
(78 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
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“…Having a tendency to make negative judgements about ambiguous or neutral stimuli increases the chances of negative biases in the other domains leading to a "downward spiral" toward poor mental wellbeing, reduced quality of life, and ultimately clinical levels of anxiety or depression (Eysenck, Payne, & Santos, 2006).…”
Section: What Is Judgement Bias?mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Having a tendency to make negative judgements about ambiguous or neutral stimuli increases the chances of negative biases in the other domains leading to a "downward spiral" toward poor mental wellbeing, reduced quality of life, and ultimately clinical levels of anxiety or depression (Eysenck, Payne, & Santos, 2006).…”
Section: What Is Judgement Bias?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In humans anxiety is associated with increased expectation of negative events, and depression is associated with both increased expectation of negative events and decreased expectation of positive events (Eysenck et al, 2006). Changes in response to ambiguous cues to reward and ambiguous cues to non-reward may allow us to distinguish different emotion states in animals (Bethell & Koyama, in press;Mendl et al, 2009).…”
Section: Why Is Judgement Bias Important?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In spite of that, the overarching notions that memory biases are more associated with depression than with anxiety whereas attentional biases are more associated with anxiety than with depression are of lasting value. Of relevance, Eysenck, Payne, and Santos (2006) found that anxiety tended to be associated with future-oriented threatening events whereas depression was associated with past-oriented threatening events.…”
Section: Dimensions Of Individual Differencesmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Aunque la obtención de una puntuación global de estrés pueda ser necesaria, la valoración en cada una de las dimensiones naturales puede servirnos para conocer las principales fiíentes de estrés en un individuo determinado. Además, y como en el caso que nos ocupa, podría proporcionamos información psicopatológica relevante para conocer la relación entre el estrés y el TP, así como también entre el estrés y otros problemas psicopatológicos (Eysenck et al, 2006;Sandin et al, 2004a). Como se desprende de nuestros datos, no todas las dimensiones de estrés psicosocial parecen asociarse por igual al TP.…”
Section: Discussionunclassified
“…En uno de nuestros recientes estudios encontramos que tres tipos de estrés psicosocial (i.e., estrés psicosocial asociado a sucesos de pér-dida, daño y salud) se asociaban diferencial y específicamente a la ocurrencia de trastornos depresivos, de ansiedad e hipocondría, respectivamente (Sandin, Chorot, Santed y Valiente, 2004a). Algunos de estos datos han sido replicados recientemente por Eysenck et al (2006 ) en un estudio de laboratorio con participantes no clí-nicos. Aunque esta línea de investigación constituye un aspecto de gran interés clínico y psicopatológico, son pocos los trabajos que han abordado esta cuestión de forma específica.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified