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A Twin Study Examining Rumination as a Transdiagnostic Correlate of Psychopathology.


ABSTRACT: This study examined the genetic and environmental influences on rumination and its associations with several forms of psychopathology in a sample of adult twins (N = 744). Rumination was significantly associated with major depressive disorder, depressive symptoms, generalized anxiety disorder, eating pathology, and substance dependence symptoms. There were distinct patterns of etiological overlap between rumination and each form of psychopathology; rumination had considerable genetic overlap with depression, modest genetic overlap with eating pathology, and almost no genetic overlap with substance dependence. Findings further suggest considerable overlap between genetic and environmental influences on rumination and those contributing to the covariance between forms of psychopathology. Results were specific to ruminative thought and did not extend to self-reflection. These findings support the conceptualization of rumination as a transdiagnostic correlate and risk factor for psychopathology and also suggest that the biological and environmental mechanisms linking rumination to psychopathology may differ depending on the disorder.

SUBMITTER: Johnson DP 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5241110 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A Twin Study Examining Rumination as a Transdiagnostic Correlate of Psychopathology.

Johnson Daniel P DP   Rhee Soo Hyun SH   Friedman Naomi P NP   Corley Robin P RP   Munn-Chernoff Melissa A MA   Hewitt John K JK   Whisman Mark A MA  

Clinical psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science 20160615 6


This study examined the genetic and environmental influences on rumination and its associations with several forms of psychopathology in a sample of adult twins (<i>N</i> = 744). Rumination was significantly associated with major depressive disorder, depressive symptoms, generalized anxiety disorder, eating pathology, and substance dependence symptoms. There were distinct patterns of etiological overlap between rumination and each form of psychopathology; rumination had considerable genetic over  ...[more]

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