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Rumination Induction Task in fMRI: Test-Retest Reliability in Youth and Potential Mechanisms of Change with Intervention.

Melinda Westlund SchreinerRaina H MillerAnna M JacobsenSheila E CrowellErin A KaufmanBrian FarsteadDaniel A FeldmanLeah ThomasKatie L BessetteRobert C WelshEdward R WatkinsScott A Langenecker
Published in: medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences (2023)
RF-CBT appears to lead to rumination-related brain change. We demonstrated that the rumination induction task has fair to excellent reliability among individuals who do not receive an intervention that explicitly targets the ruminative habit, whereas reliability of this task is largely poor in the context of RF-CBT. This has meaningful implications in longitudinal and intervention studies, particularly when conceptualizing it as an important target for intervention. It also suggests one of many possible mechanisms for why fMRI test-retest reliability can be low that appears unrelated to the methodology itself.
Keyphrases
  • randomized controlled trial
  • resting state
  • functional connectivity
  • mental health
  • white matter