Emotional reactivity to daily events in adolescents with clinical depression and subthreshold depression: an experience sampling study
T. C.-Y. Liu, N. T.-K. Kwok, P. W.-L. Leung, S. F. Hung, S. M. S. Chan, S. L. Ma, S. W. H. Chau, W. H. Wong, S. H.-W. So

TL;DR
This study finds that adolescents with subthreshold depression react more strongly to daily events than those with major depression or healthy peers.
Contribution
The study reveals a nonlinear relationship between depression severity and emotional reactivity in adolescents using experience sampling.
Findings
Subthreshold depression showed the strongest positive affect reactivity to uplifts and stress.
Major depression had the highest levels of negative affect and stress but not the strongest reactivity.
Emotional reactivity patterns differ across depression severity levels in adolescents.
Abstract
Adolescents with depression have distinct affective reactions to daily events, but current research is controversial. The emotional context insensitivity theory suggests blunted reactivity in depression, whereas the hypotheses of negative potentiation and mood brightening effect suggest otherwise. While nonlinear associations between depression severity and affective reactivity have been observed, studies with a separate subclinical group remain rare. Subthreshold depression (SD), defined by two to four symptoms lasting for two weeks or more, provides a dimensional view to the underpinnings of affective reactivity. In this study, we compared positive affect (PA) and negative affect (NA) reactivity to positive and negative daily events (uplifts and stress) among adolescents with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD), SD and healthy controls (HC) using experience sampling methods (ESM). We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health Research Topics · Digital Mental Health Interventions · Psychological and Temporal Perspectives Research
