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24 Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy enhances executive control in recurrent depression in a randomized wait-list controlled trial
- Lin Sorensen, Daniel Andre Jensen, Jon Vollestad, Steinunn Adolfsdottir, Julie Lillebostad Svendsen, Endre Visted, Berge Osnes, Elisabeth Schanche
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 900-901
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Objective:
Adults with recurrent depression have been shown to have cognitive deficits also while in remission. Thus, it has been suggested that with a chronic course of depression, poorer executive control can be a vulnerability factor for depressive relapse. This has led to research on how cognitive remediation training can protect against recurrent depressive episodes. Findings indicate that such training has short term effects on cognitive functioning, and small effect on depression symptoms. Less focus has been on how “standard” psychotherapy can have positive effects on executive and attentional control. Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) has been shown to be as effective as antidepressant medication in preventing relapses of depressive episodes. Mindfulness training in healthy samples seems to improve executive and attentional control. However, the few studies of MBCT in recurrent depression show mixed effects on executive and attentional control. As far as we know, no prior study has investigated the effect of MBCT in recurrent depression with the revised version of the attention network test (ANT-R). In a randomized controlled trial, we expected that the MBCT group would show enhanced executive control and lower levels of attentional fluctuations than the wait-list controls (WLC) from pre (T0) to post (T1) treatment. We further investigated if positive effects of MBCT on executive and attentional control were associated with reduction in depression symptoms.
Participants and Methods:Adults with recurrent depression in partial or full remission (N = 64) were randomized to MBCT or WLC. In the MBCT and WLC groups, 25 and 29, respectively, performed the ANT-R at T0 and T1. The attention network reaction time scores of executive control, alerting, and orienting were calculated in addition to attention fluctuations scores of intra-individual reaction time variability (IIVRT) and exgaussian-mean of longer reaction times (TAU). Self-reported depression symptoms were measured with BDI-II. The two groups were compared at baseline on full-scale IQ (WASI), executive control (D-KEFS Stroop), and processing speed (D-KEFS TMT).
Results:The MBCT and WCL groups did not differ significantly in age or gender distribution, education, full-scale IQ or in baseline executive and attentional control as measured with the ANT-R, Stroop and TMT. The MBCT group showed a higher efficiency in conflict detection as measured with the executive control score from T0 to T1 compared to the WLC. This positive effect of MBCT on executive control was independent from the greater reductions in depression symptoms in the MBCT group compared to in the WLCs. However, reduction in depression symptoms at T1 was associated with enhanced efficiency in responding to alerting cues in conflict detection. No effects of MBCT compared to WLC were found at T1 on the attention fluctuation measures (IIVRT and TAU).
Conclusions:The findings from the current study indicates that MBCT enhances executive control in adults with recurrent depression. As such, MBCT may target an important cognitive vulnerability factor in the chronic course of recurrent depression that may contribute to its efficacy in preventing depressive relapses. It was also observed that reductions in depression symptoms led to higher alertness in conflict detection.
Inhibition and Switching in Healthy Aging: A Longitudinal Study
- Steinunn Adólfsdóttir, Daniel Wollschlaeger, Eike Wehling, Astri J. Lundervold
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 23 / Issue 1 / January 2017
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 12 December 2016, pp. 90-97
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Objectives: Discrepant findings of age-related effects between cross-sectional and longitudinal studies on executive function (EF) have been described across different studies. The aim of the present study was to examine longitudinal age effects on inhibition and switching, two key subfunctions of EF, calculated from results on the Color Word Interference Test (CWIT). Methods: One hundred twenty-three healthy aging individuals (average age 61.4 years; 67% women) performed the CWIT up to three times, over a period of more than 6 years. Measures of inhibition, switching, and combined inhibition and switching were analyzed. A longitudinal linear mixed effects models analysis was run including basic CWIT conditions, and measures of processing speed, retest effect, gender, education, and age as predictors. Results: After taking all predictors into account, age added significantly to the predictive value of the longitudinal models of (i) inhibition, (ii) switching, and (iii) combined inhibition and switching. The basic CWIT conditions and the processing speed measure added to the predictive value of the models, while retest effect, gender, and education did not. Conclusions: The present study on middle-aged to older individuals showed age-related decline in inhibition and switching abilities. This decline was retained even when basic CWIT conditions, processing speed, attrition, gender, and education were controlled. (JINS, 2017, 23, 90–97)