Perseverative Thinking and Executive Function in Adults Aged 45-70 With and Without Mood Disorders
Jane Lee, Katharine Burns, Jennifer Nicoloro-Santabarbara, Faith Gunning, Katherine Burdick

TL;DR
The study explores how mood disorders and aging affect the relationship between emotion regulation and executive function in adults aged 45-70.
Contribution
The study reveals that executive function protects against perseverative thinking in healthy middle-aged adults but not in those with mood disorders.
Findings
Executive function was negatively associated with perseverative thinking in healthy middle-aged adults.
Younger individuals with mood disorders showed higher levels of perseverative thinking than older individuals.
In mood disorder groups, executive function did not significantly correlate with perseverative thinking across age groups.
Abstract
Emotion regulation (ER) improves with age, while executive functioning (EF) tends to decline. However, the presence of a mood disorder (MD) negatively impacts both processes. We examined whether MD diagnosis and age influence the relationship between ER and EF in 238 adults aged 45 to 70, including individuals with MD (n = 131) and healthy controls (HC; n = 107). ER was assessed using the Perseverative Thinking Questionnaire (PTQ) and an EF composite score was derived from four cognitive tasks. Participants were grouped into three age groups: 45–53 (n = 72), 54–62 (n = 102), and 63–70 (n = 64). Hierarchical regression analysis revealed a main effect of EF on PTQ (β=-0.264, p < 0.05), though all interaction terms were non-significant. Follow-up correlational analysis showed that EF was negatively associated with PTQ in middle-aged HCs only (r =-.437, p < 0.05). ANOVA results revealed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes · Mindfulness and Compassion Interventions · Bipolar Disorder and Treatment
