All Relations between affective value and brooding

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Mara J Richman Czégel, Zsolt Unoka, Robert B Dudas, Zsolt Demetrovic. Rumination in Borderline Personality Disorder: A Meta-analytic Review. Journal of personality disorders. vol 36. issue 4. 2022-08-01. PMID:35913769. borderline personality disorder (bpd) is characterized by deficits in emotion regulation and affective liability, specifically rumination. 2022-08-01 2023-08-14 Not clear
Zsolt Horváth, Péter Sárosi, Letícia Boda, Eszter Farkas, Mónika Koós, Zsolt Demetrovics, Róbert Urbá. The relationship between anxious-depressive symptoms and harmful cannabis use: Multiple mediation models via rumination, negative urgency, protective behavioral strategies and refusal self-efficacy. Comprehensive psychiatry. vol 116. 2022-05-06. PMID:35523045. distressful and negative affective states can be associated with limited self-regulation capacities, while emotion regulation processes (e.g., rumination, negative urgency) might contribute to further depletion of self-control capacities which in turn can lead to diminished control over cannabis use. 2022-05-06 2023-08-13 Not clear
Carola Dell'Acqua, Elisa Dal Bò, Simone Messerotti Benvenuti, Ettore Ambrosini, Antonino Vallesi, Daniela Palomb. Depressed mood, brooding rumination and affective interference: The moderating role of heart rate variability. International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology. vol 165. 2021-10-25. PMID:33838165. self-report measures of depression and brooding were collected, whereas the emotional stroop task was employed to measure affective interference. 2021-10-25 2023-08-13 Not clear
Carola Dell'Acqua, Elisa Dal Bò, Simone Messerotti Benvenuti, Ettore Ambrosini, Antonino Vallesi, Daniela Palomb. Depressed mood, brooding rumination and affective interference: The moderating role of heart rate variability. International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology. vol 165. 2021-10-25. PMID:33838165. stepwise linear regression analyses revealed that hrv was a significant moderator of the positive association between depression and brooding rumination, but not of the association between depression and affective interference. 2021-10-25 2023-08-13 Not clear
Carola Dell'Acqua, Elisa Dal Bò, Simone Messerotti Benvenuti, Ettore Ambrosini, Antonino Vallesi, Daniela Palomb. Depressed mood, brooding rumination and affective interference: The moderating role of heart rate variability. International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology. vol 165. 2021-10-25. PMID:33838165. cardiac vagal tone, indexed by heart rate variability (hrv), is believed to represent a proxy of the functional integrity of the neural networks implicated in brooding rumination, affective interference and depression. 2021-10-25 2023-08-13 Not clear
Golnaz Tabibni. An affective neuroscience model of boosting resilience in adults. Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews. vol 115. 2021-06-21. PMID:32522489. a comprehensive review of these strategies using an affective neuroscience approach indicates three distinct general routes to resilience: 1) down-regulating the negative (e.g., exposure, cognitive reappraisal) by reducing distress-related responses of the amygdala, hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, and autonomic nervous system; 2) up-regulating the positive (e.g., optimism, social connectedness) by activating mesostriatal reward pathways, which in turn can buffer the effects of stress; and 3) transcending the self (e.g., mindfulness, religious engagement) by reducing activation in the default mode network, a network associated with self-reflection, mind-wandering, and rumination. 2021-06-21 2023-08-13 Not clear
Tony T Wells, Matt R Judah, Alissa J Ellis, John E McGeary, Christopher G Beever. Inhibition of Attention for Affective Material: Contributions by Psychology & neuroscience. vol 8. issue 4. 2020-10-01. PMID:26779324. inhibition of attention for affective material: contributions by failure to inhibit attention to irrelevant affective information has been linked to depression and rumination. 2020-10-01 2023-08-13 Not clear
Suzanne Vrshek-Schallhorn, Elizabeth A Velkoff, Richard E Zinbar. Trait rumination and response to negative evaluative lab-induced stress: neuroendocrine, affective, and cognitive outcomes. Cognition & emotion. vol 33. issue 3. 2020-03-20. PMID:29623753. theoretical models of depression posit that, under stress, elevated trait rumination predicts more pronounced or prolonged negative affective and neuroendocrine responses, and that trait rumination hampers removing irrelevant negative information from working memory. 2020-03-20 2023-08-13 Not clear
Bao-Juan Li, Karl Friston, Maria Mody, Hua-Ning Wang, Hong-Bing Lu, De-Wen H. A brain network model for depression: From symptom understanding to disease intervention. CNS neuroscience & therapeutics. vol 24. issue 11. 2019-10-11. PMID:29931740. elevated connectivity of a ventral limbic affective network appears to be associated with excessive negative mood (dysphoria) in the patients; decreased connectivity of a frontal-striatal reward network has been suggested to account for loss of interest, motivation, and pleasure (anhedonia); enhanced default mode network connectivity seems to be associated with depressive rumination; and diminished connectivity of a dorsal cognitive control network is thought to underlie cognitive deficits especially ineffective top-down control of negative thoughts and emotions in depressed patients. 2019-10-11 2023-08-13 Not clear
D Caroline Blanchard, Ksenia Meyz. Risk assessment and serotonin: Animal models and human psychopathologies. Behavioural brain research. vol 357-358. 2019-03-29. PMID:28705471. initially characterized in animal models, it provides a number of behavioral and functional parallels to patterns of rumination, gaze biases, and other forms of affective cognition that appear to be disregulated in depression and anxiety. 2019-03-29 2023-08-13 mouse
Peter Koval, Peter Kuppens, Nicholas B Allen, Lisa Sheebe. Getting stuck in depression: the roles of rumination and emotional inertia. Cognition & emotion. vol 26. issue 8. 2013-04-26. PMID:22671768. we examined emotional inertia of subjective affective experiences in daily life among a sample of non-clinical undergraduates (study 1), and of affective behaviours during a family interaction task in a sample of clinically depressed and non-depressed adolescents (study 2), and related it to self-reported rumination and depression severity. 2013-04-26 2023-08-12 Not clear
Marieke Karlijn van Vugt, Peter Hitchcock, Ben Shahar, Willoughby Britto. The effects of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy on affective memory recall dynamics in depression: a mechanistic model of rumination. Frontiers in human neuroscience. vol 6. 2012-10-11. PMID:23049507. the effects of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy on affective memory recall dynamics in depression: a mechanistic model of rumination. 2012-10-11 2023-08-12 Not clear
Janet Shibley Hyde, Amy H Mezulis, Lyn Y Abramso. The ABCs of depression: integrating affective, biological, and cognitive models to explain the emergence of the gender difference in depression. Psychological review. vol 115. issue 2. 2008-06-24. PMID:18426291. the authors propose a model that integrates affective (emotional reactivity), biological (genetic vulnerability, pubertal hormones, pubertal timing and development) and cognitive (cognitive style, objectified body consciousness, rumination) factors as vulnerabilities to depression that, in interaction with negative life events, heighten girls' rates of depression beginning in adolescence and account for the gender difference in depression. 2008-06-24 2023-08-12 Not clear