Beck Depression Inventory associated_with left frontal region
Evidence from:
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Evidence (3 sources)
Resting frontal EEG asymmetry as an endophenotype for depression risk: sex-specific patterns of frontal brain asymmetry.
(2010)
PMID:20677839
cited
participants with moderate and high BDI-II scores displayed lower relative left frontal activity than those with low scores (p < .001)
confidence: 0.95
Resting frontal EEG asymmetry as an endophenotype for depression risk: sex-specific patterns of frontal brain asymmetry.
(2010)
PMID:20677839
cited
women with high-BDI-II scores displayed lower relative left frontal activity than women with moderate (p = .04) and low BDI-II scores (p < .001)
confidence: 0.93
Resting frontal EEG asymmetry as an endophenotype for depression risk: sex-specific patterns of frontal brain asymmetry.
(2010)
PMID:20677839
cited
higher BDI-II scores were associated with relatively less left frontal activity (F(1,303)=11.0, p=.001)
confidence: 0.96