Mood-induction research—its implications for clinical depression
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2018, Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental PsychiatryCitation Excerpt :In particular, studies are needed to examine the impact of emotional distress on the strength of the DSH-relief association among participants with psychiatric disorders that have been linked to high rates of DSH but are less often studied in relation to this behavior, such as posttraumatic stress disorder (Dixon-Gordon, Tull, & Gratz, 2014) and depression (Andover et al., 2005). Such studies would benefit from the use of negative emotion inductions that are relevant to the particular disorder under investigation, including personalized trauma scripts (Keane et al., 1998) for participants with PTSD and sadness inductions (e.g., reading depressing self-referent statements or remembering past unpleasant events; Goodwin & Williams, 1982) for participants with depression. Finally, although our negative emotion induction resulted in a significant (and moderately sized) increase in NA, it may not have been powerful or personally-relevant enough to affect the strength of the DSH-relief association among participants with a repeated history of this behavior.
Recollecting positive and negative autobiographical memories disrupts working memory
2014, Acta PsychologicaCitation Excerpt :These effects of emotion induction on WM performance indicate that such manipulations are capable of influencing tasks with storage components, in addition to measures of executive function (e.g. Phillips et al., 2002). The finding of nonspecific effects of emotion on WM performance is consistent with earlier models (Ellis & Ashbrook, 1987; Seibert & Ellis, 1991), but apparently inconsistent with studies that show valence-specific effects of emotion on WM and attention (e.g. Gray, 2001; Phillips et al., 2002). This difference may be due to the particular elicitation technique used, as most previous studies used methods such as film and picture presentation.
Empathic behavioral and physiological responses to dynamic stimuli in depression
2012, Psychiatry ResearchCitation Excerpt :Empirically, deficits have been characterized by an impaired ability to identify and discriminate emotions conveyed via facial expressions (Leppänen et al., 2004; Leppänen, 2006; Surguladze et al., 2004, 2005; Suslow et al., 2004; Bourke et al., 2010), as well as distorted emotion self-regulation capacities (Beauregard et al., 2006; Diener et al., 2009). These findings are further supported by self-reports following mood induction procedures conveying a blunted affect in depressed patients (Goodwin and Williams, 1982; Nelson and Stern, 1988; Falkenberg et al., 2012). The latter is one facet of emotion reactivity, which we see as the response aspect of emotion processing (e.g. subjective, behavioral, physiological, as well as cerebral, Keltner and Gross, 1999).
Induction of Depressed Mood Disrupts Emotion Regulation Neurocircuitry and Enhances Pain Unpleasantness
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