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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2012 Mar 4.
Published in final edited form as: J Affect Disord. 2011 Jun 12;133(3):457–466. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2011.05.009

Table 1.

Demographic and clinical characteristics of bipolar (BD) and non-clinical control (NC) participants across Study 1 and Study 2.

Study 1
Emotion reactivity
Study 2
Emotion recovery


BD
(n = 23)
NC
(n = 24)
Statistic BD
(n = 23)
NC
(n = 25)
Statistic
Demographic
Age 39.13 (2.61) 35.46 (2.56) F = 1.51 32.30 (2.13) 35.76 (2.05) F = 1.37
Female (%) 77.8% 52.0% χ2 = 3.81 78.3% 72.0% χ2 = 0.25
Caucasian (%) 77.8% 56.0% χ2 = 2.80 43.5% 28.0% χ2 = 1.26
Education (years) 15.30 (0.42) 14.54 (0.41) F = 2.17 15.30 (0.49) 15.76 (0.47) F = 0.51
Employed (%) 74.1% 84.0% χ2 = 0.77 65.2% 80.0% χ2 = 1.33
Partnered (%) 33.3% 26.1% χ2 = 0.31 26.1% 24.0% χ2 = 0.03
Living alone (%) 22.2% 28.0% χ2 = 0.23 22.7% 25.0% χ2 = 0.03
Clinical
YMRS 3.29 (0.45) 1.25 (0.42) F = 8.61 a 2.29 (0.38) 0.76 (0.35) F = 8.67 b
IDS-C 7.68 (0.79) 3.56 (0.76) F = 19.64 a 7.35 (0.67) 2.96 (0.64) F = 22.37 b

Note: BD = Bipolar participants; NC = Non-clinical control participants; YMRS = Young Mania Rating Scale; IDS-C = Inventory to Diagnose Depression; Mean values (adjusted for covariates) are displayed with standard errors in parentheses where applicable.

a

p < 0.05 for BP and NC in Study 1.

b

p < 0.05 for BP and NC in Study 2.