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Evidence supports a causal role of insomnia in the development and maintenance of depression, yet mechanisms underlying this association in young people are not well established. Attention biases have been implicated separately in the sleep and depression fields and represents an important candidate mechanism. Poor sleep may lead to a negative attention bias (characteristic of depression) by impacting attentional control. This study assessed the hypothesis that attentional control and negative attention bias would sequentially mediate the relationship between insomnia and depressive symptoms in an unselected sample of young people (17-24 years). Concerns have been raised regarding the psychometric properties of tasks used to measure attention bias, and a Dual-Probe Task is emerging as a more reliable measure. Participants (N = 275, Male = 59, M
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Isabel Clegg
The University of Western Australia
Lies Notebaert
The University of Western Australia
Cele Richardson
The University of Western Australia
Behaviour Research and Therapy
The University of Western Australia
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Clegg et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e6a891b6db64358762b96a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brat.2024.104569