Author
Mueller, S. C., Ünal, Çağla Nur, Saretta, M., Al Mughairbi, F., Gómez-Odriozola, J., Calvete, E., Metin, B.
Publication Date
2020-10
Publication Place
-
Springer Nature
Subject
War, Trauma, Adolescents, Refugee, Emotion, Working memory, Interpretation bias
Type
Periodical
Language
English
Digital
Yes
Manuscript
No
Library
Özyeğin University
Library Asset ID
1018-8827
Record ID
593511ea-825a-4db6-8c06-5010803ec7c7
Date
2020-10
Notes
Special Research Fund (Bijzonder Onderzoeksfonds, BOF) at Ghent University
Sample Text
The number of adolescent refugees around the world has been continuously increasing over the past few years trying to escape war and terror, among other things. Such experience not only increases the risk for mental health problems including anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but also may have implications for socio-cognitive development. This study tested cognitive-affective processing in refugee adolescents who had escaped armed conflict in Syria and now resided in Istanbul, Turkey. Adolescents were split into a high trauma (n = 31, 12 girls, mean age = 11.70 years, SD = 1.15 years) and low trauma (n = 27, 14 girls, mean age = 11.07 years, SD = 1.39 years) symptom group using median split, and performed a working memory task with emotional distraction to assess cognitive control and a surprise faces task to assess emotional interpretation bias. The results indicated that high (vs. low) trauma symptom youth were similar to 20% worse correctly remembering the spatial location of a cue, although both groups performed at very low levels. However, this finding was not modulated by emotion. In addition, although all youths also had a similar to 20% bias toward interpreting ambiguous (surprise) faces as more negative, the high (vs. low) symptom youth were faster when allocating such a face to the positive (vs. negative) emotion category. The findings suggest the impact of war-related trauma on cognitive-affective processes essential to healthy development.
DOI
10.1007/s00787-020-01656-8