Abstract

Executive functioning (EF) consists of a set of related, but distinct, higher-level cognitive abilities that are used to organize and integrate lower-level processes in the service of engaging in goal-direct behavior. Evidence suggests that deficits in EF are a vulnerability factor for the development of posttraumatic stress (PTS) symptoms. Less understood, however, is the role that EF plays in symptom maintenance and exacerbation following trauma exposure. As such, the primary purpose of the present study was to determine whether EF deficits exacerbate PTS symptoms over the course of one year. A secondary aim of this study was to use a cross-lagged design to determine the directional relations among EF deficits and PTS. Trauma-exposed adults (N = 98) completed a clinical interview and self-report measures at an initial assessment session (Time 1 [T1]). Participants also completed self-report measures at 6- (Time 2 [T2]; n = 92) and 12-month (Time 3 [T3]; n = 91) follow-up sessions. As predicted, EF deficits at T2 mediated the relationship between PTS symptoms from T1 to T3, thus suggesting that EF deficits exacerbate PTS symptoms following trauma exposure. Results from a cross-lagged path analysis from T2 to T3 suggest that deficits in EF exert a stronger influence on the maintenance of PTS symptoms than vice versa. These results have implications for (a) identifying individuals that are at elevated risk for developing PTS symptoms, (b) developing precision medicine-based approaches for alleviating PTS symptoms, and (c) improving well-established PTSD treatments for those with relative deficits in EF.

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