| Literature DB >> 19685944 |
Lauren B Alloy1, Lyn Y Abramson, Patricia D Walshaw, Rachel K Gerstein, Jessica D Keyser, Wayne G Whitehouse, Snezana Urosevic, Robin Nusslock, Michael E Hogan, Eddie Harmon-Jones.
Abstract
The authors examined concurrent and prospective associations of behavioral approach system (BAS)-relevant and non-BAS-relevant cognitive styles with bipolar spectrum disorders. Controlling for depressive and hypomanic/manic symptoms, 195 individuals with bipolar spectrum disorders scored higher than 194 demographically similar normal controls on BAS sensitivity and BAS-relevant cognitive dimensions of performance concerns, autonomy, and self-criticism, but not on behavioral inhibition system sensitivity and non-BAS-relevant dimensions of approval seeking, sociotropy, and dependency. Moreover, group differences on autonomy fully mediated the association between higher BAS sensitivity and bipolar status. In addition, only BAS-related cognitive dimensions predicted the likelihood of onset of depressive and hypomanic/manic episodes among the bipolar individuals over a 3.2-year follow-up, controlling for initial symptoms and past history of mood episodes. Higher autonomy and self-criticism predicted a greater likelihood of hypomanic/manic episodes, and higher autonomy predicted a lower likelihood of major depressive episodes. In addition, autonomy mediated the associations between BAS sensitivity and prospective hypomanic/manic episodes. These findings suggest that individuals with bipolar spectrum disorders may exhibit a unique profile of BAS-relevant cognitive styles that influence the course of their mood episodes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19685944 PMCID: PMC2761740 DOI: 10.1037/a0016604
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Abnorm Psychol ISSN: 0021-843X