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1.
Behav Res Ther ; 179: 104559, 2024 May 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38761557

ABSTRACT

The ability to focus on and increase positive emotion in response to mental imagery may play a key role in emotional wellbeing. Moreover, deficits in this ability might underlie emotional disorders such as depression. Here, we set out to determine whether people could use savoring to upregulate subjective and electrocortical response to mental imagery of previously viewed positive and neutral pictures, and whether this would be negatively affected by depression. On each trial, participants (N = 49) viewed a positive or neutral picture, prior to simply re-imagining the previously presented picture ("view") or re-imagining the picture while savoring it ("savor"). Results showed that savoring increased electrocortical and subjective response to imagined stimuli; however, this effect was only evident at the electrocortical level when controlling for depression. Moreover, depression moderated electrocortical findings, such that individuals who were more depressed showed a reduced effect of savoring on neural response to mental imagery. Results are in line with recent work that has shown the benefits of positive affect treatment for depression, to suggest that deficits in savoring mental imagery may play a role in the development and/or maintenance of depression.

2.
Psychophysiology ; 61(6): e14537, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38333910

ABSTRACT

Savoring is a positive emotion up-regulation technique that can increase electrocortical and self-reported valence and arousal to positive and neutral pictures, with effects persisting to increase response to the same stimuli when encountered later. Outside of the lab, emotion regulation techniques that persist to affect not just encounters with the same stimuli but also encounters with similar, but previously unencountered stimuli should save individuals time and effort. Here, we used event-related potentials and picture ratings to test whether savoring would generalize to similar, but previously unseen positive pictures. To this end, 89 participants (56 female; M age = 18.96 years, SD = 1.87) were asked to savor positive pictures from one category (e.g., happy people) and to view positive pictures from another category (e.g., cute animals), as well as to view neutral pictures (e.g., plants). In a subsequent passive picture viewing task, participants viewed novel pictures from all three categories (i.e., happy people, cute animals, plants). In the first task, savoring was effective for pictures of animals throughout picture presentation, but only for pictures of people during the later part of picture presentation. In the second task, savoring generalized to novel pictures of animals, though this was only evident in the early portion of picture processing (and for self-reported ratings). Therefore, savoring holds promise as a useful technique for increasing positive emotion in everyday life, though more work is needed to understand whether effects may vary depending on different types of picture content.


Subject(s)
Electroencephalography , Evoked Potentials , Humans , Female , Male , Adolescent , Young Adult , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Adult , Emotional Regulation/physiology , Generalization, Psychological/physiology , Emotions/physiology , Arousal/physiology , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology
3.
Biol Psychiatry Glob Open Sci ; 3(4): 930-938, 2023 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37881540

ABSTRACT

Background: Fear and anxiety are distinct dimensions of psychopathology that may be characterized by differences in dimensional threat reactivity. Heightened response to predictable threat is hypothesized to underlie fear symptomatology, whereas increased response to unpredictable threat may underlie anxiety. Despite widespread acceptance of this model, these purported associations have rarely been tested, and the prognostic value of predictable and unpredictable threat responding is unclear. Here we examined multilevel indicators of predictable and unpredictable threat response as cross-sectional correlates and prospective predictors of transdiagnostic fear and anxiety. Methods: Fifty-two individuals with varying levels of internalizing psychopathology (31 female) performed the no-threat, predictable threat, and unpredictable threat task. Transdiagnostic fear and anxiety were assessed at baseline (time 1) and approximately 1.5 years later (time 2). We used event-related potential, the stimulus-preceding negativity, as a measure of threat anticipation and startle eyeblink as a measure of defensive reactivity during the no-threat, predictable threat, and unpredictable threat task. These probes were assessed as cross-sectional correlates and prospective predictors of fear and anxiety. Results: Participants with larger time 1 stimulus-preceding negativities to predictable threat were characterized by greater time 1 fear. Larger time 1 stimulus-preceding negativities to unpredictable threat were associated with greater increases in time 2 anxiety. Heightened time 1 startle to predictable threat predicted larger increases in time 2 fear. Conclusions: Results validate predictable and unpredictable threat responding as dimensional correlates of transdiagnostic fear versus anxiety and suggest that psychophysiological measures of predictable and unpredictable threat response hold promise as prospective predictors of trajectories of fear and anxiety.

4.
Biol Psychiatry ; 93(4): 352-361, 2023 02 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36280453

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Knowledge of the neural mechanisms underlying increased disease burden in anxiety disorders that is unaccounted for by individual categorical diagnoses could lead to improved clinical care. Here, we tested the utility of a joint functional magnetic resonance imaging-electroencephalography neurobiological profile characterized by overvaluation of negative stimuli (amygdala) in combination with blunted elaborated processing of these same stimuli (the late positive potential [LPP], an event-related potential) in predicting increased psychopathology across a 2-year period in people with anxiety disorders. METHODS: One hundred ten participants (64 female, 45 male, 1 other) including 78 participants with phobias who varied in the extent of their internalizing comorbidity and 32 participants who were free from psychopathology viewed negative and neutral pictures during separate functional magnetic resonance imaging blood oxygen level-dependent and electroencephalogram recordings. Dysphoria was assessed at baseline and 2 years later. RESULTS: Participants with both heightened amygdala activation and blunted LPPs to negative pictures showed the greatest increases in dysphoria 2 years later. Cross-sectionally, participants with higher comorbidity load (≥2 additional diagnoses, n = 34) showed increased amygdala activation to negative pictures compared with participants with lower comorbidity load (≤1 additional diagnosis, n = 44) and compared with participants free from psychopathology. In addition, high comorbid participants showed reduced LPPs to negative pictures compared with low comorbid participants. CONCLUSIONS: Heightened amygdala in response to negative stimuli in combination with blunted LPPs could indicate overvaluation of threatening stimuli in the absence of elaborated processing that might otherwise help regulate threat responding. This brain profile could underlie the worsening and maintenance of internalizing psychopathology over time.


Subject(s)
Brain , Fear , Male , Humans , Female , Prospective Studies , Fear/physiology , Anxiety Disorders , Electroencephalography , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Comorbidity , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Emotions/physiology
5.
Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci ; 21(2): 347-354, 2021 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33751481

ABSTRACT

To date, the emotion regulation literature has focused primarily on the down-regulation of negative emotion, with far fewer studies interrogating the mechanisms at work in positive emotion regulation. This body of work has suggested that nonaffective mechanisms, such as cognitive load have a role to play in reducing emotional response. For example, the late positive potential (LPP), which tracks attention to salient stimuli, is reduced when task-irrelevant negative and neutral stimuli are presented under high compared with low working memory load. Using positive stimuli, working memory load has been shown to reduce the LPP elicited by positive words and faces but has not previously been shown to modulate the LPP elicited by positive scenes. Emotional scenes are the predominant type of stimuli used in the broader emotion regulation literature, are more arousing than faces, and have been shown to more strongly modulate the LPP. Here, 41 participants performed a working memory task interspersed with the presentation of positive and neutral scenes, while electroencephalography was recorded. Results showed that the LPP was increased for positive compared with neutral pictures and reduced on high-load compared to low-load trials. Working memory performance was worse on high-load compared with low-load trials, although it was not significantly correlated with the LPP, and picture type did not affect working memory performance. Results bridge to the willful emotion regulation literature to increase understanding of the mechanisms underlying positive emotion regulation, which has been relatively unexamined.


Subject(s)
Evoked Potentials , Memory, Short-Term , Cognition , Electroencephalography , Emotions , Humans
6.
Int J Psychophysiol ; 162: 166-179, 2021 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33571574

ABSTRACT

Standardized picture databases such as the International Affective Picture System (IAPS; Lang et al., 2008) and Emotional Picture Set (EmoPicS; Wessa et al., 2010) facilitate the study of emotional scene perception, and have the potential to increase replicability and comparability of results within and across labs. However, with the availability of large numbers of pictures comes the challenge of selecting subsets of pictures for inclusion in experimental paradigms. Typically, researchers rely on expert consensus or normed ratings to select emotional pictures, but these methods may favor pictures with high agreement over those that provide the most information or best differentiate individuals. Here, in n = 297 individuals, we demonstrate how item response theory (IRT), which provides information on psychometric functioning at both the item and test level, can be used to select negative and positive pictures for eliciting the late positive potential (LPP), a measure of emotional attention. We present results for 50 negative and 50 positive pictures, and show how pictures with higher discrimination values improve differentiation between individuals with different levels of emotional attention. Moreover, "strong" modulators of the LPP - i.e., erotic and mutilation pictures - provided the most information about individuals with low levels of emotional attention, whereas, "weak" modulators of the LPP - i.e., affiliative and exciting pictures - provided the most information about individuals with high levels of emotional attention. Results demonstrate how IRT can inform emotional picture selection and improve the psychometrics of psychophysiological tasks, which can ultimately increase the replicability of findings based on standardized pictures.


Subject(s)
Attention , Emotions , Electroencephalography , Humans , Photic Stimulation , Psychometrics
7.
Psychophysiology ; 58(3): e13754, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33350475

ABSTRACT

Savoring is an emotion regulation technique that aims to increase, sustain, and deepen positive emotion. It has been incorporated into several novel, "positive affect" interventions for anxiety, depression, and chronic pain, but has not been studied in a laboratory setting. As such, it is unknown whether savoring can modulate subjective and neural correlates of emotion-processing and whether savoring might exert a persistent effect on stimulus processing (i.e., modulating response at subsequent encounter). Here, 49 participants savored or viewed positive and neutral pictures, before seeing the same pictures again approximately 20 min later without instructions to savor (or view) pictures. Subjective valence and arousal ratings and the picture-elicited late positive potential (LPP) were assessed during both tasks. Results showed that savoring increased participant ratings of picture pleasantness and arousal as well as a picture-elicited LPP. Moreover, pictures that had previously been savored continued to elicit higher ratings during the subsequent picture viewing task. A larger LPP was observed for previously savored positive and neutral pictures during an early portion of picture viewing; later on during picture viewing, this effect was limited to positive pictures only (i.e., it was not evident for neutral pictures). Results validate savoring as an effective and durable means of increasing positive emotion and are discussed in the context of a broader emotion regulation literature, which has primarily examined the downregulation of negative picture processing.


Subject(s)
Affect/physiology , Cerebral Cortex/physiology , Emotional Regulation/physiology , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Electroencephalography , Female , Humans , Male , Young Adult
8.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 9298, 2020 06 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32518277

ABSTRACT

The importance of affect processing to human behavior has long driven researchers to pursue its measurement. In this study, we compared the relative fidelity of measurements of neural activation and physiology (i.e., heart rate change) in detecting affective valence induction across a broad continuum of conveyed affective valence. We combined intra-subject neural activation based multivariate predictions of affective valence with measures of heart rate (HR) deceleration to predict predefined normative affect rating scores for stimuli drawn from the International Affective Picture System (IAPS) in a population (n = 50) of healthy adults. In sum, we found that patterns of neural activation and HR deceleration significantly, and uniquely, explain the variance in normative valent scores associated with IAPS stimuli; however, we also found that patterns of neural activation explain a significantly greater proportion of that variance. These traits persisted across a range of stimulus sets, differing by the polar-extremity of their positively and negatively valent subsets, which represent the positively and negatively valent polar-extremity of stimulus sets reported in the literature. Overall, these findings support the acquisition of heart rate deceleration concurrently with fMRI to provide convergent validation of induced affect processing in the dimension of affective valence.


Subject(s)
Affect/physiology , Behavior/physiology , Brain Mapping/methods , Heart Rate/physiology , Neuroimaging/methods , Adolescent , Adult , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/physiology , Female , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult
9.
Am J Public Health ; 110(S1): S52-S55, 2020 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31967891

ABSTRACT

Although the number of people incarcerated in the United States has grown dramatically, research on how incarceration affects individuals and the communities they return to has lagged behind. This may be because of the unique challenges of doing research within carceral systems and the relatively small number of investigators who are competent to undertake these efforts.We provide a primer for investigators with limited experience conducting research in carceral settings and highlight considerations and recommendations that may aid those conducting health research with incarcerated persons. We follow this with an illustrative case example exemplifying how the considerations apply to recent health research that our team conducted on mental illness prevalence in a large regional jail.Understanding how to effectively conduct research with criminal justice populations and systems is the first step in beginning to understand the effects of mass incarceration as a driver of health disparities and health inequity.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Research , Prisoners , Prisons , Biomedical Research/ethics , Biomedical Research/standards , Criminal Law , Humans , United States
10.
J Mol Cell Cardiol ; 92: 185-95, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26900039

ABSTRACT

Obesity is associated with chronic inflammation which plays a critical role in the development of cardiovascular dysfunction. Because the adaptor protein caspase recruitment domain-containing protein 9 (CARD9) in macrophages regulates innate immune responses via activation of pro-inflammatory cytokines, we hypothesize that CARD9 mediates the pro-inflammatory signaling associated with obesity en route to myocardial dysfunction. C57BL/6 wild-type (WT) and CARD9(-/-) mice were fed normal diet (ND, 12% fat) or a high fat diet (HFD, 45% fat) for 5months. At the end of 5-month HFD feeding, cardiac function was evaluated using echocardiography. Cardiomyocytes were isolated and contractile properties were measured. Immunofluorescence was performed to detect macrophage infiltration in the heart. Heart tissue homogenates, plasma, and supernatants from isolated macrophages were collected to measure the concentrations of pro-inflammatory cytokines using ELISA kits. Western immunoblotting analyses were performed on heart tissue homogenates and isolated macrophages to explore the underlying signaling mechanism(s). CARD9 knockout alleviated HFD-induced insulin resistance and glucose intolerance, prevented myocardial dysfunction with preserved cardiac fractional shortening and cardiomyocyte contractile properties. CARD9 knockout also significantly decreased the number of infiltrated macrophages in the heart with reduced myocardium-, plasma-, and macrophage-derived cytokines including IL-6, IL-1ß and TNFα. Finally, CARD9 knockout abrogated the increase of p38 MAPK phosphorylation, the decrease of LC3BII/LC3BI ratio and the up-regulation of p62 expression in the heart induced by HFD feeding and restored cardiac autophagy signaling. In conclusion, CARD9 knockout ameliorates myocardial dysfunction associated with HFD-induced obesity, potentially through reduction of macrophage infiltration, suppression of p38 MAPK phosphorylation, and preservation of autophagy in the heart.


Subject(s)
CARD Signaling Adaptor Proteins/genetics , Heart Failure/genetics , Inflammation/genetics , Obesity/genetics , Animals , CARD Signaling Adaptor Proteins/biosynthesis , Cardiomyopathies , Diet, High-Fat , Heart Failure/pathology , Humans , Inflammation/metabolism , Inflammation/pathology , Insulin Resistance/genetics , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/biosynthesis , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/genetics , Myocardium/metabolism , Myocardium/pathology , Myocytes, Cardiac/metabolism , Myocytes, Cardiac/pathology , Obesity/metabolism , Obesity/pathology , Signal Transduction/genetics , Transcription Factor TFIIH , Transcription Factors/biosynthesis , p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/biosynthesis , p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/genetics
11.
Aging Clin Exp Res ; 26(4): 403-9, 2014 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24347123

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND AIM: With a substantial increase in diagnosed Parkinson's disease, it is of great importance to examine tolerance and physical measures of evolving exercise interventions. Of particular importance, a multifaceted exercise intervention combining active-assisted cycling and resistance training to older adults diagnosed with Parkinson's disease is being assessed. METHODS: Fourteen older adults diagnosed with Parkinson's disease and ten healthy older adults (67.5 ± 7.9 years of age) engaged in an 8-week, 24-session, multifaceted exercise protocol. The protocol consisted of both active-assisted cycling and resistance training. Tolerance was measured, as well as multiple indicators of health-related physical fitness. These indicators examined improvements in cardiovascular performance, muscular strength, muscular endurance, and flexibility. RESULTS: Twenty-two older adults and older adults diagnosed with Parkinson's disease tolerated the intervention by completing all 24 sessions. Repeated-measures analysis of variance demonstrated significant (P ≤ 0.003) improvements in cardiovascular performance, muscular strength, muscular endurance, and flexibility for both groups of individuals. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: The multifaceted intervention is the first to combine both active-assisted cycling and resistance training. The older adult and the older adult diagnosed with Parkinson's disease exhibited both tolerance and health-related improvements in physical fitness following the intervention.


Subject(s)
Exercise/physiology , Parkinson Disease/physiopathology , Physical Fitness/physiology , Aged , Cardiovascular Diseases/physiopathology , Case-Control Studies , Exercise Therapy/methods , Female , Humans , Male , Muscle Strength/physiology , Postural Balance/physiology , Resistance Training/methods
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