Abstract
IntroductionAge has been found to moderate the relation between cognitive biases and psychopathology, yet little is known about normative age-related change in these biases during adolescence. Adolescence might be a key developmental period for changes in negatively biased information-processing, and understanding the trajectories of these processes in a typically developing population is a pre-requisite for further comprehending their association with psychopathology. MethodsThis study explores the effect of age on seven cognitive biases in a diverse community sample from the United Kingdom (N = 540) aged 10–17 years (309 were female) using self-report measures. ResultsAge demonstrated a positive linear association with three biases: threat interpretation, negative attributions and overgeneralizing scores. ConclusionsImportant changes take place during adolescence that may increase young people's negative cognitive biases. Empirical data on normative age-related changes in cognitive biases should be integrated into theoretical models of biased information-processing and psychopathology.
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