Authors
Daniel P Moriarity, Tommy Ng, Madison K Titone, Iris K Chat, Robin Nusslock, Gregory E Miller, Lauren B Alloy
Publication date
2020
Journal
Behavior Therapy
Volume
51
Issue
5
Pages
829-842
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Abnormal reward responsiveness and rumination each are associated with elevated inflammation and mood symptoms. Ruminating on positive and negative affect, or dampening positive affect, may amplify, or buffer, the associations of reward hyper/hyposensitivity with inflammation and mood symptoms. Young adults (N = 109) with high or moderate reward sensitivity completed reward responsiveness and ruminative style measures at the initial visit of a longitudinal study of mood symptoms, a blood draw to assess inflammatory biomarkers, and mood symptom measures at the study visits before and after the day of the blood draw. The interaction between high reward responsiveness and rumination on positive affect was associated with higher levels of an inflammatory composite measure and hypomanic symptoms. The interaction between lower reward responsiveness and high dampening of positive affect was …
Total citations
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