Network structure of phasic and tonic irritability in adults: A Bayesian Gaussian graphical model

J Affect Disord. 2024 Dec 26:S0165-0327(24)02072-X. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2024.12.084. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Background: Tonic (i.e., irritable mood) and phasic (i.e., temper outbursts) irritability are distinct constructs in childhood, yet there has been little work investigating their relations in adulthood. In particular, no study has examined the relations between these symptoms in the daily lives of adults. The present study seeks to address these gaps by applying a Bayesian Gaussian graphical model to daily diary data of tonic and phasic irritability in adults.

Method: A total of 122 participants (Mage = 34.94 [SD = 12.3] years, 52 % female) completed up to 18 days of daily diary, with questions on both tonic and phasic irritability. Contemporaneous, temporal, and between-person networks were constructed using 5 items of tonic and 11 items of phasic irritability. Predictability, centrality, density, and network loadings were also calculated.

Results: Five main findings emerged. First, phasic and tonic irritability were connected in our contemporaneous and temporal networks but distinct in our between-person network. Second, phasic irritability symptoms demonstrated the most importance and influence across networks. Third, tonic irritability symptoms best connected the two subnetworks. Fourth, phasic irritability symptoms appeared to have the potential to be more responsive to interventions. Fifth, tonic irritability demonstrated robust associations with daily functional impairment.

Conclusions: Tonic and phasic irritability symptoms demonstrate unique associations in the daily lives of adults. Future work should examine the differential potential of these symptoms to respond to targeted interventions.

Keywords: Bayesian Gaussian graphical model; Network analysis; Phasic irritability; Tonic irritability.