Surprisingly, people with mild depression are actually more tuned into the feelings of others than those who aren’t depressed, a team of Queen’s psychologists has discovered.
“This was quite unexpected because we tend to think that the opposite is true,” says lead researcher Kate Harkness. “For example, people with depression are more likely to have problems in a number of social areas.”
The researchers were so taken aback by the findings, they decided to replicate the study with another group of participants. The second study produced the same results: People with mild symptoms of depression pay more attention to details of their social environment than those who are not depressed.
Their report on what is known as “mental state decoding” – or identifying other people’s emotional states from social cues such as eye expressions – is published today in the international journal, Cognition and Emotion.
Also on the research team from the Queen’s Psychology Department are Professors Mark Sabbagh and Jill Jacobson, and students Neeta Chowdrey and Tina Chen. Drs. Roumen Milev and Michela David at Providence Continuing Care Centre, Mental Health Services, collaborated on the study as well.
Previous related research by the Queen’s investigators has been conducted on people diagnosed with clinical depression. In this case, the clinically depressed participants performed much worse on tests of mental state decoding than people who weren’t depressed.
To explain the apparent discrepancy between those with mild and clinical depression, the researchers suggest that becoming mildly depressed (dysphoric) can heighten concern about your surroundings. “People with mild levels of depression may initially experience feelings of helplessness, and a desire to regain control of their social world,” says Dr. Harkness. “They might be specially motivated to scan their environment in a very detailed way, to find subtle social cues indicating what others are thinking and feeling.”
The idea that mild depression differs from clinical depression is a controversial one, the psychologist adds. Although it is often viewed as a continuum, she believes that depression may also contain thresholds such as the one identified in this study. “Once you pass the threshold, you’re into something very different,” she says.
Funding for this study comes from a New Opportunities Grant from the Canada Foundation for Innovation.
Source: Queen's University
Date: 2005-11-22
URL: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/11/051121164438.htm
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I'm a kind of perceptive person. So.... I might have mild depression? No wonder I feel down from time to time....~~

mild depression:沮喪也有分溫和和急症的喔,恩!果然隔行如隔
山,不知道的事物還真多。identifying other people’s
emotional states from social cues such as eye
expressions.我覺得一個人的眼睛可以透露出很多情緒,觀其眸子,
人焉廋哉......
yylan
Mild doesn't mean "溫和" at this point.
It'd more appropriate if you interpret it
as「輕度」. Deos it make sense to you
now? :)
what does 「人焉瘦哉」mean?
我的國文太差...:(
這句話是孔老夫子講的:「視其所以﹐觀其所由﹐察其所安﹐人焉廋
哉!人焉廋哉!」
眸子->眼睛,
觀察一個人的眼睛,人的內在無所遁形。
Vickie妳會害怕人家看妳的明眸嗎^^
Not at all..
嘻嘻....
我喜歡看美女的眼睛^^
Vickie
底圖很有聖誕氣氛喔
有拍照下雪的紐約嗎
我很期待看到呢 :)
interesting! i wonder how they diagnosed the "mild
depression." people feel bad and depressed from time
to time, don't they?
To yylan,
I did take some pictures of snow. I'll
post them up some time later. :)
To spartan,
Yeah, actually most people
inherent "depression" in variant degrees.
The only difference between "normals"
and "people with depression" is the
latter "recognize" it and dwell on it;
contrastly, the former just let it come
and go.