Attentional control deficits and suicidal ideation variability: An ecological momentary assessment study in major depression

Suicidal behavior is associated with deficits in cognitive control; however, suicidal ideation (SI), a key precursor to suicidal behavior, has been less consistently linked to neuropsychological functioning. Additionally, no study to date has examined attentional control capacities in relation to va...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of affective disorders 2023-02, Vol.323, p.819-825
Hauptverfasser: Herzog, Sarah, Keilp, John G., Galfalvy, Hanga, Mann, J. John, Stanley, Barbara H.
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container_issue
container_start_page 819
container_title Journal of affective disorders
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creator Herzog, Sarah
Keilp, John G.
Galfalvy, Hanga
Mann, J. John
Stanley, Barbara H.
description Suicidal behavior is associated with deficits in cognitive control; however, suicidal ideation (SI), a key precursor to suicidal behavior, has been less consistently linked to neuropsychological functioning. Additionally, no study to date has examined attentional control capacities in relation to variability in suicidal ideation, defined as fluctuation in SI intensity and duration across short periods of time. Prior research suggests that suicidal individuals with highly variable SI experience greater stress-responsive increases in SI and cortisol, potentially raising risk for suicidal behavior. Here, we examined attentional control capacities associated with SI variability and severity in ninety-five subjects with major depressive disorder. Variability and severity of SI and depressive affect were quantified using Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) over a 7-day period. Participants completed the Continuous Performance Task (CPT) and a computerized Stroop task for assessment of attentional control. EMA SI variability was associated with greater attentional interference on the Stroop task, and this was not accounted for by severity of SI, concurrently assessed depressive affect, or baseline depression. CPT performance was not related to SI variability or intensity. Findings highlight the utility of EMA methods in characterizing patterned experiences of SI and suggest that attentional control deficits may contribute to these characteristic patterns. •Stroop interference predicts suicidal ideation (SI) variability over a 7-day EMA period.•Link between SI variability and Stroop interference was not due to depression or SI severity.•Attentional control deficits may underlie temporal patterns of SI linked to high suicide risk.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jad.2022.12.053
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subjects Attention - physiology
Attentional control
Continuous
Depressive Disorder, Major - psychology
Ecological Momentary Assessment
Humans
Interference
Performance task
Stroop
Suicidal Ideation
Suicidal ideation variability
title Attentional control deficits and suicidal ideation variability: An ecological momentary assessment study in major depression
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