The Attentional Boost Effect in Euthymic Bipolar Patients
Componente | Categoria |
---|---|
Alessandro Santirocchi | Dottorando/Assegnista/Specializzando componente non strutturato del gruppo di ricerca |
Bipolar disorder is characterized by mood alterations that include manic or hypomanic, depressive and mixed episodes, intermingled with intervals of euthymic remission (DSM-5, 2014). Patients show significant attentional deficits (Cullen et al., 2016; Palazzo et al., 2017), even after controlling for mild residual symptomatology (Clark et al., 2002) and pharmacological treatment (Thompson et al., 2005; Goswami et al., 2009). In tasks in which participants have to monitor a continuous stream of stimuli to detect a pre-specified target, euthymic patients show a decrease in target sensitivity and slowed response latencies (Bora et al., 2005; Clark et al., 2002; Sepede et al., 2012). The primary aim of the present study is to investigate the Attentional Boost Effect (ABE) in a sample of euthymic patients. Considering that the ABE represents a trade-off between attentional competition and attentional facilitation (Mulligan et al., 2014; Prull, 2019; Swallow & Jiang, 2010, 2013), we expect euthymic patients to exhibit a reduced advantage for images encoded with target stimuli. Swallow and Jiang (2010) showed that, when the attentional requests needed to detect the targets were slightly increased, the negative effects of attentional competition exceeded the positive effects of attentional facilitation, thus resulting in the elimination of the ABE. If the maintenance of a fast and accurate performance in the target detection task requires more attention resources in euthymic patients than in healthy controls (as suggested by previous studies: eg. Bora et al., 2005; Sepede et al., 2012), then the ABE should be reduced or eliminated in the patient group. Moreover, to investigate whether the effect is modulated by participants' age, we will divide both the patients¿ and the healthy controls' samples into two sub-groups: the young group (participants between 18 and 35 years) and the adult group (participants between 36 and 60 years).