An investigation of mental imagery in bipolar disorder: Exploring “the mind's eye”
An investigation of mental imagery in bipolar disorder: Exploring “the mind's eye”
Objectives
Mental imagery abnormalities occur across psychopathologies and are hypothesized to drive emotional difficulties in bipolar disorder (BD). A comprehensive assessment of mental imagery in BD is lacking. We aimed to test whether (i) mental imagery abnormalities (abnormalities in cognitive stages and subjective domains) occur in BD relative to non-clinical controls; and (ii) to determine the specificity of any abnormalities in BD relative to depression and anxiety disorders.
Methods
Participants included 54 subjects in the BD group (depressed/euthymic; n=27 in each subgroup), subjects with unipolar depression (n=26), subjects with anxiety disorders (n=25), and non-clinical controls (n=27) matched for age, gender, ethnicity, education, and premorbid IQ. Experimental tasks assessed cognitive (non-emotional) measures of mental imagery (cognitive stages). Questionnaires, experimental tasks, and a phenomenological interview assessed subjective domains including spontaneous imagery use, interpretation bias, and emotional mental imagery.
Results
(i) Compared to non-clinical controls, the BD combined group reported a greater impact of intrusive prospective imagery in daily life, more vivid and “real” negative images (prospective imagery task), and higher self-involvement (picture-word task). The BD combined group showed no clear abnormalities in cognitive stages of mental imagery. (ii) When depressed individuals with BD were compared to the depressed or anxious clinical control groups, no significant differences remained—across all groups, imagery differences were associated with affective lability and anxiety.
Conclusions
Compared to non-clinical controls, BD is characterized by abnormalities in aspects of emotional mental imagery within the context of otherwise normal cognitive aspects. When matched for depression and anxiety, these abnormalities are not specific to BD—rather, imagery may reflect a transdiagnostic marker of emotional psychopathology.
625 - 709
Di Simplicio, M.
be181439-cabc-4fcf-bbc0-6d55225eead1
Renner, F.
31032aa4-657f-43f4-ba5c-78da88610171
Blackwell, S.E.
5a9368ca-cb5b-453b-b5ed-229df2da25b1
Mitchell, H.
06b74ff6-e3ef-469f-8a69-b31ed409c09b
Stratford, H.J.
7c9b2d6b-6189-4585-a958-ca249979e6b6
Watson, P.
6c8b1e44-51ef-4f63-b4b4-307cdfbe7aa6
Myers, N.
42fd13b9-987b-48f1-967a-47571bafb1a1
Nobre, A.C.
05df36ac-e69d-4947-96fd-843d5f0ed2e9
Lau-Zhu, A.
f2fa66ed-f6ee-4822-966b-d07ac2b435d1
Holmes, E.A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Di Simplicio, M.
be181439-cabc-4fcf-bbc0-6d55225eead1
Renner, F.
31032aa4-657f-43f4-ba5c-78da88610171
Blackwell, S.E.
5a9368ca-cb5b-453b-b5ed-229df2da25b1
Mitchell, H.
06b74ff6-e3ef-469f-8a69-b31ed409c09b
Stratford, H.J.
7c9b2d6b-6189-4585-a958-ca249979e6b6
Watson, P.
6c8b1e44-51ef-4f63-b4b4-307cdfbe7aa6
Myers, N.
42fd13b9-987b-48f1-967a-47571bafb1a1
Nobre, A.C.
05df36ac-e69d-4947-96fd-843d5f0ed2e9
Lau-Zhu, A.
f2fa66ed-f6ee-4822-966b-d07ac2b435d1
Holmes, E.A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Di Simplicio, M., Renner, F., Blackwell, S.E., Mitchell, H., Stratford, H.J., Watson, P., Myers, N., Nobre, A.C., Lau-Zhu, A. and Holmes, E.A.
(2017)
An investigation of mental imagery in bipolar disorder: Exploring “the mind's eye”.
Bipolar Disorders, 18 (8), .
(doi:10.1111/bdi.12453).
Abstract
Objectives
Mental imagery abnormalities occur across psychopathologies and are hypothesized to drive emotional difficulties in bipolar disorder (BD). A comprehensive assessment of mental imagery in BD is lacking. We aimed to test whether (i) mental imagery abnormalities (abnormalities in cognitive stages and subjective domains) occur in BD relative to non-clinical controls; and (ii) to determine the specificity of any abnormalities in BD relative to depression and anxiety disorders.
Methods
Participants included 54 subjects in the BD group (depressed/euthymic; n=27 in each subgroup), subjects with unipolar depression (n=26), subjects with anxiety disorders (n=25), and non-clinical controls (n=27) matched for age, gender, ethnicity, education, and premorbid IQ. Experimental tasks assessed cognitive (non-emotional) measures of mental imagery (cognitive stages). Questionnaires, experimental tasks, and a phenomenological interview assessed subjective domains including spontaneous imagery use, interpretation bias, and emotional mental imagery.
Results
(i) Compared to non-clinical controls, the BD combined group reported a greater impact of intrusive prospective imagery in daily life, more vivid and “real” negative images (prospective imagery task), and higher self-involvement (picture-word task). The BD combined group showed no clear abnormalities in cognitive stages of mental imagery. (ii) When depressed individuals with BD were compared to the depressed or anxious clinical control groups, no significant differences remained—across all groups, imagery differences were associated with affective lability and anxiety.
Conclusions
Compared to non-clinical controls, BD is characterized by abnormalities in aspects of emotional mental imagery within the context of otherwise normal cognitive aspects. When matched for depression and anxiety, these abnormalities are not specific to BD—rather, imagery may reflect a transdiagnostic marker of emotional psychopathology.
Text
Bipolar Disorders - 2016 - Di Simplicio - An investigation of mental imagery in bipolar disorder Exploring the mind s eye
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 28 October 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 January 2017
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 507781
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507781
ISSN: 1398-5647
PURE UUID: 42f3863f-3b5f-4729-8e6f-91c1baf3d167
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 06 Jan 2026 17:44
Last modified: 08 Jan 2026 03:28
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
M. Di Simplicio
Author:
F. Renner
Author:
S.E. Blackwell
Author:
H. Mitchell
Author:
H.J. Stratford
Author:
P. Watson
Author:
N. Myers
Author:
A.C. Nobre
Author:
A. Lau-Zhu
Author:
E.A. Holmes
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics