International Journal of Bipolar Disorders (Oct 2023)

Supra-second interval timing in bipolar disorder: examining the role of disorder sub-type, mood, and medication status

  • Victória A. Müller Ewald,
  • Nicholas T. Trapp,
  • McCall E. Sarrett,
  • Benjamin D. Pace,
  • Linder Wendt,
  • Jenny G. Richards,
  • Ilisa K. Gala,
  • Jacob N. Miller,
  • Jan R. Wessel,
  • Vincent A. Magnotta,
  • John A. Wemmie,
  • Aaron D. Boes,
  • Krystal L. Parker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40345-023-00312-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Background Widely reported by bipolar disorder (BD) patients, cognitive symptoms, including deficits in executive function, memory, attention, and timing are under-studied. Work suggests that individuals with BD show impairments in interval timing tasks, including supra-second, sub-second, and implicit motor timing compared to the neuronormative population. However, how time perception differs within individuals with BD based on disorder sub-type (BDI vs II), depressed mood, or antipsychotic medication-use has not been thoroughly investigated. The present work administered a supra-second interval timing task concurrent with electroencephalography (EEG) to patients with BD and a neuronormative comparison group. As this task is known to elicit frontal theta oscillations, signal from the frontal (Fz) lead was analyzed at rest and during the task. Results Results suggest that individuals with BD show impairments in supra-second interval timing and reduced frontal theta power during the task compared to neuronormative controls. However, within BD sub-groups, neither time perception nor frontal theta differed in accordance with BD sub-type, depressed mood, or antipsychotic medication use. Conclusions This work suggests that BD sub-type, depressed mood status or antipsychotic medication use does not alter timing profile or frontal theta activity. Together with previous work, these findings point to timing impairments in BD patients across a wide range of modalities and durations indicating that an altered ability to assess the passage of time may be a fundamental cognitive abnormality in BD.

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