Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
920941 Biological Psychology 2013 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Resting RSA and RSA reactivity jointly predict depression and mood regulation.•Neither RSA metric predicts either outcome on its own.•Mood regulation partially mediates joint effects of RSA indices on depression.•RSA indices jointly buffer depressogenic effects of ineffective mood regulation.

We examined whether the combined indices of respiratory sinus arrhythmia at rest (resting RSA) and in response to a sad film (RSA reactivity) predict effective and ineffective responses to reduce sadness (adaptive vs. maladaptive mood repair) in women with histories of juvenile-onset depression (n = 74) and no history of major mental disorders (n = 75). Structural equation models were used to estimate latent resting RSA, depression, and adaptive and maladaptive mood repair and to test the study hypotheses. Results indicated that combinations of resting RSA + RSA reactivity (RSA patterns) predicted maladaptive mood repair, which in turn, mediated the effects of RSA pattern on depression. Further, RSA patterns moderated the depressogenic effects of maladaptive mood repair. RSA patterns were unrelated to adaptive mood repair. Our findings suggest that mood repair is one mechanism through which physiological vulnerabilities adversely affect mental health.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
Authors
, , , ,