From dysphoria to anhedonia: age-related shift in the link between cognitive and affective symptoms
Daniel Harlev, Aya Vituri, Moni Shahar, Noham Wolpe

TL;DR
This study finds that the way cognitive and emotional symptoms connect in depression changes with age, with anhedonia becoming more important in older adults.
Contribution
The paper identifies an age-related shift in the key bridging symptom between cognitive and affective domains in depression.
Findings
Dysphoria is the main bridging symptom in young adults, while anhedonia is in older adults.
Cognition mediates the link between gray matter volume and anhedonia in older adults.
Age-related differences exist in how brain structure relates to cognitive-affective symptoms.
Abstract
Depression in aging shows heterogeneous symptoms across cognitive, affective, and neurobiological domains. Traditional categorical diagnoses may not capture these complex patterns, prompting a shift toward dimensional or domain-based approaches. We examined whether the symptoms that bridge cognition and affect differ by age and explored their associations with brain structure. Data from 756 young (≤45 years) and 1,230 older (≥65 years) adults from the Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience were analyzed. Cognition was assessed using the Addenbrooke’s Cognitive Examination—Revised, and depressive and anxiety symptoms were assessed using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. Graphical LASSO was used to construct cognitive–affective networks, testing for age-related differences in strength and bridging centrality measures. Building on these findings, we further examined the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments · Anxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes · Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research
