Cagla Unal’s research while affiliated with Özyeğin University and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


Sample trial for (a) the SEMTOS task, in which a miss1 trial is presented (i.e., a slight change between cue and target). b Sample trial of the emotional interpretation task. Please note that the ITI in the task was variable and differed from trial to trial to avoid anticipatory responding
a The difference in % accuracy (from 0.00–1.00, 1.00 = 100%) between the HTS (dotted line) and LTS (dashed line) youths for the four different locations in the SEMTOS task. b The corresponding reaction times in ms showing no evidence for any influence of reaction time on the accuracy finding. Error bars denote S.E.M.
a The percent to which surprise faces were allocated to a positive or a negative category. b The significant group difference in reaction time, with a lower value indicating faster allocation to the positive category. Error bars denote S.E.M
Scatterplot illustrates the positive association between war traumatic events (y-axis) and allocation of surprise faces to the negative category (x-axis) for the low trauma symptom group (white circles, LTS) and high trauma symptom group (black circles, HTS)
Working memory and emotional interpretation bias in a sample of Syrian refugee adolescents
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

December 2021

·

207 Reads

·

14 Citations

European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry

Sven C. Mueller

·

Cagla Unal

·

Michela Saretta

·

[...]

·

Baris Metin

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 ~ 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 ~ 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.

View access options

Citations (1)


... 4243 On the contrary, low resilience has been negatively associated with adverse mental health outcomes such as loneliness, psychological distress, 4445 depression, 37 Bronfenbrenner, 1979. 38 Lazarus, 1993. 39 Masten, 2019. ...

Reference:

Mental Health Challenges of Refugee Children
Working memory and emotional interpretation bias in a sample of Syrian refugee adolescents

European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry