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A transdiagnostic examination of anxiety and stress on executive function outcomes in disorders with social impairment

Authors :
Ian B. Hickie
Karen L. Pepper
Adam J. Guastella
Sharon L. Naismith
Yun Ju C. Song
Eleni A. Demetriou
Shin Ho Park
Emma Thomas
Source :
Journal of affective disorders. 281
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background Executive function (EF) difficulties characterise a number of psychiatric conditions and EF impairment may be a predisposing factor and/or consequence of anxiety and stress. The aim of the study was to examine EF factors in a mixed clinical cohort (Autism Spectrum Disorder and Social Anxiety Disorder) characterised by social impairment and investigate the influence of trait anxiety and state-based depression, anxiety and stress. Methods In Study 1, a factor analysis identified EF and non-EF latent factor structures (N=205). In Study 2, (N=137) multiple regression analyses investigated the association between trait anxiety and state based depression, anxiety and stress, on EF and non-EF cognitive domains and on the two composite indices of the Behavioural Rating Inventory of Executive Function (BRIEF). Results Trait anxiety was associated with better performance on neuropsychological measures of EF while state-based stress was associated with lower EF performance. A dissociation was observed between trait anxiety and state stress on the two behavioural indices of the BRIEF. Depression, anxiety and stress did not predict performance on non-EF cognitive domains. Limitations The cross-sectional design precludes cause-effect conclusions, further only self-report measures of affect were utilised and our performance measures of EF did not include a working memory test. Conclusions The results demonstrate that trait anxiety and state-based stress influence EF processes across disorders with social impairment. The transdiagnostic efficacy of this finding can facilitate remediation strategies, it may also contribute to individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder gaining better access to mental health services.

Details

ISSN :
15732517
Volume :
281
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of affective disorders
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4fbf6df1da9f3ff59691accdf9d71133