2020
DOI: 10.1017/s0033291720000422
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Within-person increase in pathological worry predicts future depletion of unique executive functioning domains

Abstract: Background Affective neuroscience and scar theories propose that increased excessive worry, the hallmark symptom of generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), predicts future declines in executive functioning (EF). However, the preponderance of cross-sectional designs used to examine between-person chronic worry–EF relationships has blocked progress on understanding their potentially causal within-person associations. Accordingly, this study used bivariate dual latent change score (LCS) models to test whether wi… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1

Citation Types

3
24
0

Year Published

2020
2020
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
6
1

Relationship

4
3

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 29 publications
(27 citation statements)
references
References 82 publications
3
24
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Relatedly, the cross-sectional, between-person negative associations between anxiety or depression and EF in this study may be accounted for by the attentional control theory (121) and attentional scope model of rumination (122). Note that these theories are inappropriate for explaining the within-person, cross-lagged, and long-term change-to-future change relations between EF and depression severity found herein as they argue that symptom-EF perturbation relations occur across brief durations or at one time-point (61,123). Further, these models assert that elevated symptoms could deplete finite EF resources for task-pertinent processing and increased anxiety and depression would be reliably linked to greater cognitive rigidity (i.e., difficulty disengaging from threats or distractions) at a single time-point.…”
Section: Lagged Relations Between Anxiety Severity and Executive Functionmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…Relatedly, the cross-sectional, between-person negative associations between anxiety or depression and EF in this study may be accounted for by the attentional control theory (121) and attentional scope model of rumination (122). Note that these theories are inappropriate for explaining the within-person, cross-lagged, and long-term change-to-future change relations between EF and depression severity found herein as they argue that symptom-EF perturbation relations occur across brief durations or at one time-point (61,123). Further, these models assert that elevated symptoms could deplete finite EF resources for task-pertinent processing and increased anxiety and depression would be reliably linked to greater cognitive rigidity (i.e., difficulty disengaging from threats or distractions) at a single time-point.…”
Section: Lagged Relations Between Anxiety Severity and Executive Functionmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…Extending that finding, Australian residential care older adults’ 2‐year increase in depressive symptoms was related to subsequent 2‐ to 4‐year decreased perceptual speed across 15 years (Bielak, Gerstorf, Kiely, Anstey, & Luszcz, 2011). Similarly, within‐person 9‐year rise in pathological worry was related to future 9‐year reduced global and specific executive functioning (Zainal & Newman, in press). Our 23‐year study extends these investigations by testing reciprocal relations between 3‐ and 14‐year change in unique cognitive constructs (processing speed, verbal WM, and spatial cognition) and future 3‐ to 14‐year change in trait NA.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Unmeasured third variables (e.g., genetics; 127) may have contributed to observed outcomes. Additionally, although other studies have observed within-or between-person relations between depression and EF domains of shifting and inhibition(61), consistent with theory and neuroanatomical evidence(128), these EF facets were not measured herein. Also, as no psychiatric diagnostic measures were included, future studies that include diagnostic instruments could determine if the results would be similar.…”
mentioning
confidence: 51%
“…The latter possibility can only be captured by using within-person methods that also capture change. Moreover, the foregoing scar and vulnerability theories posit that EF-symptom relations unfold within persons across long durations (46)(47)(48)(49)(50)(51). Awareness of within-person prolonged trajectories of increased depression or anxiety, EF decrements, and their covariation may guide the design of personalized MENTAL HEALTH AND EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONING 6 prevention, diagnostic, and treatment efforts that rely on idiographic (or within-person) more than between-person data, as part of precision psychiatry (52)(53)(54).…”
Section: Heightened Depression and Executive Functioning Bidirectionally Impair One Anothermentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation