Effects of changing contingencies on the behavior of depressed and nondepressed individuals
- PMID: 8282935
- DOI: 10.1037//0021-843x.102.4.642
Effects of changing contingencies on the behavior of depressed and nondepressed individuals
Abstract
The effects of rules versus shaping on the behavior of depressed and nondepressed individuals were compared. Extending the findings in the depressive realism literature to a learning paradigm, the behavior of depressed individuals was more sensitive to changing contingencies than was the behavior of nondepressed individuals. Contrary to hypotheses, however, this effect appeared due primarily to the nondepressive Ss' strategy of continuing to follow an experimenter's inaccurate rules. Results suggest the relative absence of self-presentational concerns may lead depressed individuals to be more accurate in judging environmental contingencies.
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