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. 2022 Apr 20;308:554–561. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2022.04.077

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

Effects of the mood-congruent bias in latency to self-attribute positive and negative morally tuned adjectives (ratio between latencies to attribute positive/negative), and frequency of self-attribution of morally negative self-descriptive elements, on severity of depression and negative thinking styles. A: effect of ratio between latencies on frequency of attribution of negative self-scheme elements in patients with depressive ratings above the clinical threshold (ZSDS = 50). Black dots = COVID survivors (continous line fitting); White dots = hospitalized MD patients (dotted line fitting). B: effect of ratio between latencies on frequency of attribution of negative self-scheme elements in COVID survivors without depression (black dots, continous line fitting) and in HC (white dots, dotted line fitting). C: effect of ratio between latencies on ZSDS scores, with linear least-squares fitting and thresholds for the presence of clinical depression and of information processing bias (dotted lines). White dots: COVID survivors without depression; Black dots: depressed COVID survivors; Stars: hospitalized MD patients. D: effect of frequency of attribution of negative self-scheme elements on ZSDS score.