Major depressive disorder (MDD) represents one of the most urgent global mental health challenges, affecting hundreds of millions of individuals across cultures and socioeconomic contexts. While the affective and motivational dimensions of depression have long been emphasized, the cognitive dimension of the disorder has increasingly attracted attention. Within this cognitive framework, the study by Li et al represents an important milestone. It is the first investigation to combine the Wason selection task (WST), a classical paradigm for examining conditional reasoning, with event-related potentials (ERP), a method uniquely suited for revealing the temporal dynamics of cognitive processing. By integrating behavioral performance with electrophysiological measures, the authors provide valuable new insights into the neural mechanisms underlying reasoning dysfunction in MDD. However, while this study makes an important contribution, caution is warranted in interpreting its clinical and diagnostic implications. The methodological limitations, such as small sample size, limited ecological validity of the WST, and absence of control for confounding variables, should be carefully considered when evaluating the generalizability of ERP findings. Beyond summarizing the findings of Li et al, this letter emphasizes both the strengths and weaknesses of their approach. While the integration of cognitive reasoning and neurophysiological evidence is commendable, the lack of replication and comparative data leaves important open questions about how these results align with prior ERP or functional magnetic resonance imaging studies of depressive cognition. A more critical synthesis of these contextual gaps enhances the interpretative depth of the article. Overall, the study offers valuable preliminary evidence of conditional reasoning dysfunction in MDD, but its conclusions should be viewed as exploratory rather than definitive. Future research must address methodological limitations before clinical translation is possible.
Elif Yöyen (Thu,) studied this question.