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Rumination and inhibition in task switching: No evidence for an association
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Grange, J (2023) Rumination and inhibition in task switching: No evidence for an association.
Rumination is typically defined as the perseverative focus of attention on negative internal thoughts and feelings, which can increase the risk of developing—
and severity once developed—of depression. It is thought the perseveration
is caused by a deficit in inhibitory control in ruminators. Congruent with
this hypothesis, estimates of inhibition in task switching—the n–2 task repetition cost—are negatively associated with estimates of rumination. However,
estimates of individual differences of n–2 task repetition costs are hampered
by (a) measurement error caused by trial-wise variation in performance, and
(b) recent evidence suggesting much of the n–2 task repetition cost measures
interference in episodic memory, not inhibition. The aim of the current
study was to revisit the question of the association between the n–2 task
repetition cost and measures of rumination by (a) statistically accounting
for measurement error by estimating n–2 task repetition costs via trial-level
Bayesian multilevel modelling, and (b) controlling for episodic interference
effects on estimates of n–2 task repetition cost by utilising a paradigm capable
of doing so. The results provided no evidence for an association between
rumination and n–2 task repetition costs, regardless of episodic interference.