Skill-set, success outcome, and mania as determinants of the illusion of control
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Iowa gambling task performance in euthymic bipolar i disorder: A meta-analysis and empirical study
2013, Journal of Affective DisordersCitation Excerpt :For example, positive affective state, which can intensify risky decision-making in nonclinical samples (Suhr and Tsanadis, 2007), might guide IGT performance among those with bipolar disorder (Buelow and Suhr, 2009). In bipolar disorder, even mild positive moods can affect cognitive performance (Stern and Berrenberg, 1979; Johnson et al., 2005; Roiser et al., 2009). It is important to consider subclinical mood states given the large effect sizes for IGT decrements related to mania (0.68, Adida et al., 2011) and hypomania (0.87; Malloy-Diniz et al., 2011 and personal communication) compared with controls.
Does risk for bipolar disorder heighten the disconnect between objective and subjective appraisals of cognition?
2013, Journal of Affective DisordersCitation Excerpt :Johnson et al. (2005, 2009) have argued that individuals at risk for bipolar disorder intermittently set excessively high goals for themselves and overestimate their ability to achieve them. Several studies have found exaggerated expectancies of success among individuals at risk for bipolar disorder in the presence of reward (Johnson et al., 2005; Stern and Berrenberg, 1979). These two literatures, one noting cognitive impairments and the other indicating unrealistic self-appraisals, have not been tested simultaneously in younger individuals at risk for the disorder.
Creativity and bipolar disorder: Touched by fire or burning with questions?
2012, Clinical Psychology ReviewCitation Excerpt :Several studies also suggest that bipolar disorder is related to elevations of confidence, whether measured for immediate (Meyer, Beevers, & Johnson, 2004) or lifetime goals (Meyer & Krumm-Merabet, 2003). Confidence appears particularly elevated once people with bipolar disorder are in a good mood (Eisner, Johnson, & Carver, 2008; Stern & Berrenberg, 1979). Hence, bipolar disorder appears related to heightened ambitions, and during positive moods, a belief that one can succeed in difficult goals.
What goes up can come down? A preliminary investigation of emotion reactivity and emotion recovery in bipolar disorder
2011, Journal of Affective DisordersCitation Excerpt :Research investigating negative emotion reactivity suggests bipolar patients do systematically not differ from controls. Specifically, inter-episode and at risk bipolar participants do not appear to differ from healthy controls in their experiential, behavioral, cognitive, or psychophysiological responses to failure feedback (Ruggero and Johnson, 2006; Stern and Berrenberg, 1979), interpersonal criticism (Cuellar et al., 2009), negative photos (Sutton and Johnson, 2002), and challenging math tests (Depue et al., 1985). Studies of neural response to negative emotional stimuli in bipolar disorder provide mixed evidence (Yurgelun-Todd et al., 2000).
Grandiose delusions: A review and theoretical integration of cognitive and affective perspectives
2011, Clinical Psychology ReviewCitation Excerpt :There has also been a lack of research into how elevated mood affects attributional style, and whether elation enhances the self-serving bias. However, one study has examined how goal attainment affects attributional style (Stern & Berrenberg, 1979). Students who scored highly on a measure of hypomania were more likely to attribute their apparent success to internal factors.
Preventing Mania: A Preliminary Examination of the GOALS Program
2009, Behavior TherapyCitation Excerpt :Even during remission, people who are vulnerable to bipolar disorder display higher confidence than those without bipolar disorder (Eckblad & Chapman, 1986; B. Meyer, Beevers, & Johnson, 2004; T. Meyer & Krumm-Merabet, 2003). More importantly, though, confidence appears particularly high after success (Stern & Berrenberg, 1979) or positive mood inductions (Mansell & Lam, 2006). Persons at risk for bipolar disorder endorse high scores on a brief self-report scale measuring dramatic upward shifts in confidence based on small successes (e.g., “When I have a small financial success, it makes me believe I could become a millionaire”; Eisner, Johnson, & Carver, 2008).