Effects of current and past depressive episodes on behavioral performance and subjective experience during an N-back task.

J Behav Ther Exp Psychiatry

University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, 3811 O'Hara Street, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, USA. Electronic address:

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Depression can negatively impact working memory (WM), and previous studies using the N-back task showed no significant differences in WM between those with remitted depression and healthy individuals, possibly due to underrepresentation of certain depression types like childhood-onset depression (COD).
  • A study involving 112 adults with COD and 80 controls evaluated WM performance and subjective experiences during a four-level N-back task, finding minimal performance differences overall, but noting that greater lifetime depressive episodes negatively affected accuracy.
  • The findings suggest that WM is mostly preserved in adults with remitted COD, but repeated episodes of depression can lead to cumulative deficits in WM performance.

Article Abstract

Background And Objectives: Depression impairs working memory (WM). And, while many studies have documented impairment in WM during depression remission, those using the N-back task did not find differences between individuals with remitted depression and healthy controls. One reason for these findings may be that certain depression phenotypes, such as the childhood-onset form, which is likely to be associated with persistent WM problems, are underrepresented or unevenly represented in the studies. Because childhood-onset depression (COD) affects individuals while cognitive development is still ongoing, it is more likely to have lasting detrimental effects, as evidenced in residual memory impairment, than depression that onsets later in life. Further, it is unclear if depression episodes have cumulative effects on WM when measured via the N-back.

Methods: We examined the effects of depression on WM performance (response time, accuracy, signal detection d') and subjective experience (difficulty, mental effort required) during a four-level N-back task among 112 adults with COD (42 currently depressed; 70 remitted depressed) and 80 never-depressed controls.

Results: Compared to never-depressed controls, there was minimal evidence of impaired WM performance among participants with remitted or current depression; the groups also reported overall similar subjective experiences during the N-back. Notably, number of lifetime depressive episodes had a detrimental cumulative effect on response accuracy and d'.

Limitations: WM was assessed only in regard to verbal memory. The sample size of currently depressed cases was smaller than that of the other groups.

Conclusions: WM remains largely intact among adults with remitted COD, but increased number of depression episodes worsens WM performance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10460824PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbtep.2023.101852DOI Listing

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