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Psychological and Neural Processing of Social Rejection and Inclusion in Major Depressive Disorder

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dc.creator Gillard, Julia Alexandra
dc.date 2017-10-16T08:36:14Z
dc.date 2017-10-16T08:36:14Z
dc.date 2017-10-05
dc.date 2017-10-14T17:22:35Z
dc.date.accessioned 2019-03-20T08:22:56Z
dc.date.available 2019-03-20T08:22:56Z
dc.identifier https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/267838
dc.identifier 10.17863/CAM.13762
dc.identifier.uri https://evidence.thinkportal.org/handle/123456789/32197
dc.description This thesis aimed to extend the existing psychological and neural basis of social processing in Major Depressive Disorder. This investigation was an attempt to resolve current conflicts and gaps in the social affective neuroscience literature regarding social functioning in depression. Chapter 1 consisted of a general introduction to the current evidence-base and theoretical frameworks surrounding social processing more generally, and in depression more specifically. ‎Chapter 2 provided an exploration of the systemic behavioural biases in in those with depression compared to mentally healthy individuals using a range of social, affective and process measures implemented across the remaining chapters. Then followed a behavioural and neural investigation into self-relevant social processing in depression. Chapter 3 described the process of memory generation implemented across ‎ Chapter 4-6 using a script-driven paradigm. It further discussed the ecological validity of this paradigm using social autobiographical memories. Chapter 4 investigated the neural and behavioural responses to self-relevant autobiographical memories of social rejection and social inclusion in individuals with depression and in healthy controls. The next two chapters discussed the behavioural and neural basis of social processing in depression in response to others’ memories of social rejection and inclusion, using traditional and novel fMRI analysis methodologies in ‎Chapter 5 and ‎‎Chapter 6, respectively. The latter applied a novel intersubject correlation analysis to the same population of depressed and healthy controls as in Chapter 5. Then, Chapter 7 presented a future application of the script-driven imagery paradigm by investigating the effectiveness of different emotion regulation strategies in response to socially salient autobiographical memories in a population of healthy controls. Finally, Chapter 8 provided a general discussion bringing together behavioural and neural findings to provide a clearer understanding of social processing in Major Depressive Disorder. Current theoretical frameworks were used to guide the interpretation of these findings.
dc.description MRC Doctoral Training Fund / Research Studentship
dc.language en
dc.publisher University of Cambridge
dc.publisher MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit
dc.publisher Murray Edwards College
dc.rights No Creative Commons licence (All rights reserved)
dc.subject Autobiographical Memory
dc.subject Major Depressive Disorder
dc.subject Social Affective Neuroscience
dc.subject fMRI
dc.subject Script-driven Imagery
dc.subject Emotion Regulation
dc.subject Social Cognition
dc.title Psychological and Neural Processing of Social Rejection and Inclusion in Major Depressive Disorder
dc.type Thesis
dc.type Doctoral
dc.type Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
dc.type PhD in Biological Sciences


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