Title of article
The relation of depression and anxiety to measures of executive functioning in a mixed psychiatric sample
Author/Authors
Todd A. Smitherman، نويسنده , , Justin K. Huerkamp، نويسنده , , Brian I. Miller، نويسنده , , Timothy T. Houle، نويسنده , , Judith R. O’Jile، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
8
From page
647
To page
654
Abstract
The relationship between mood and executive functioning is of particular importance to neuropsychologists working with mixed psychiatric samples. The present study evaluated the relation of self-reported depression and anxiety to several common measures of executive functioning: the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, the Trail Making Test, the Controlled Oral Word Association, and the Letter–Number Sequencing subtest of the Weschler Adult Intelligence Scale-III. Records from 86 adult patients evaluated in an outpatient psychiatry unit were examined. Correlations between self-reported depression or anxiety and most measures of executive functioning were small and non-significant. The variance predicted by depression or anxiety after controlling for age, gender, and IQ was minimal (typically ≤3.0%), even after conducting diagnostic subgroup analyses. These results suggest that impaired performance on measures of executive functioning is minimally related to self-reported depression and anxiety within mixed psychiatric settings.
Keywords
Executive functioning , depression , Anxiety , Wisconsin Card Sorting Test , Trail Making Test
Journal title
Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology
Record number
516896
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