All Relations between negative emotion and cannabis

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Nicholas C Glodosky, Carrie Cuttle. Motives Matter: Cannabis use motives moderate the associations between stress and negative affect. Addictive behaviors. vol 102. 2021-01-12. PMID:31706141. that is, using cannabis to cope may potentiate links between stress and negative affect. 2021-01-12 2023-08-13 Not clear
Nicholas C Glodosky, Carrie Cuttle. Motives Matter: Cannabis use motives moderate the associations between stress and negative affect. Addictive behaviors. vol 102. 2021-01-12. PMID:31706141. we therefore sought to investigate whether cannabis use motives moderate the associations between stress and negative affect. 2021-01-12 2023-08-13 Not clear
S J Bartel, S B Sherry, S H Stewar. Self-isolation: A significant contributor to cannabis use during the COVID-19 pandemic. Substance abuse. vol 41. issue 4. 2020-12-29. PMID:33044893. this is particularly concerning given that isolation and loneliness are associated with increased cannabis use, as well as using cannabis to cope with negative affect. 2020-12-29 2023-08-13 Not clear
Michael J Bordieri, Matthew T Tull, Michael J McDermott, Kim L Grat. The Moderating Role of Experiential Avoidance in the Relationship between Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptom Severity and Cannabis Dependence. Journal of contextual behavioral science. vol 3. issue 4. 2020-09-30. PMID:25478317. consistent with this research, studies provide evidence that many individuals with ptsd use cannabis to reduce negative affect and other unpleasant internal experiences associated with ptsd. 2020-09-30 2023-08-13 Not clear
Maria Testa, Weijun Wang, Jaye L Derrick, Whitney C Brown, R Lorraine Collin. Does morning affect contribute to daily Cannabis use? Addictive behaviors. vol 95. 2020-09-28. PMID:30856545. several theories posit that cannabis and other substances are used to reduce negative affect. 2020-09-28 2023-08-13 human
Maria Testa, Weijun Wang, Jaye L Derrick, Whitney C Brown, R Lorraine Collin. Does morning affect contribute to daily Cannabis use? Addictive behaviors. vol 95. 2020-09-28. PMID:30856545. this daily report study considered whether variations in positive and negative affect, reported each morning, contributed to the likelihood of cannabis use later that day. 2020-09-28 2023-08-13 human
Maria Testa, Weijun Wang, Jaye L Derrick, Whitney C Brown, R Lorraine Collin. Does morning affect contribute to daily Cannabis use? Addictive behaviors. vol 95. 2020-09-28. PMID:30856545. we also explored whether levels of positive and negative affect reported immediately after cannabis use improved, relative to that day's morning levels. 2020-09-28 2023-08-13 human
Maria Testa, Weijun Wang, Jaye L Derrick, Whitney C Brown, R Lorraine Collin. Does morning affect contribute to daily Cannabis use? Addictive behaviors. vol 95. 2020-09-28. PMID:30856545. using multilevel modeling, we modeled men's and women's use of cannabis on a given day as a function of morning levels of positive, hostile, and anxious affect, accounting for partner cannabis use that day, and mean levels of positive and negative affect. 2020-09-28 2023-08-13 human
Jennifer A Livingston, Jaye L Derrick, Weijun Wang, Maria Testa, Amanda B Nickerson, Dorothy L Espelage, Kathleen E Mille. Proximal Associations among Bullying, Mood, and Substance Use: A Daily Report Study. Journal of child and family studies. vol 28. issue 9. 2020-09-28. PMID:32269466. this study examined the daily-level associations among bullying, negative affect, and substance use (i.e., alcohol, cigarettes, electronic-cigarettes, marijuana) among a community sample of adolescents ( 2020-09-28 2023-08-13 Not clear
David G Gilbert, Norka E Rabinovich, Justin T McDanie. Nicotine patch for cannabis withdrawal symptom relief: a randomized controlled trial. Psychopharmacology. vol 237. issue 5. 2020-09-15. PMID:32034447. given that tetrahydrocannabinol (thc) and nicotine have similar effects on negative affect (na), we hypothesized that a 7-mg nicotine patch (np) would reduce na-related cannabis (can) withdrawal symptoms in cannabis-dependent (cd) individuals who were not nicotine dependent. 2020-09-15 2023-08-13 Not clear
Anne Marije Kaag, Reinout W Wiers, Taco J de Vries, Tommy Pattij, Anna E Goudriaa. Striatal alcohol cue-reactivity is stronger in male than female problem drinkers. The European journal of neuroscience. vol 50. issue 3. 2020-08-07. PMID:29888821. while sex differences in ventral striatal cue-reactivity were partly explained by sex differences in alcohol intake, cannabis use, negative affect and anxiety, this was not the case for sex differences in dorsal striatal cue-reactivity. 2020-08-07 2023-08-13 Not clear
Julia D Buckner, Michael J Zvolensky, Elizabeth M Lewi. On-line personalized feedback intervention for negative affect and cannabis: A pilot randomized controlled trial. Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology. vol 28. issue 2. 2020-08-06. PMID:31204824. on-line personalized feedback intervention for negative affect and cannabis: a pilot randomized controlled trial. 2020-08-06 2023-08-13 Not clear
Julia D Buckner, Michael J Zvolensky, Elizabeth M Lewi. On-line personalized feedback intervention for negative affect and cannabis: A pilot randomized controlled trial. Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology. vol 28. issue 2. 2020-08-06. PMID:31204824. thus, the current study tested the utility of an online personalized feedback intervention (pfi) that integrates feedback regarding cannabis with strategies to manage negative affect (pfi-nac). 2020-08-06 2023-08-13 Not clear
Julia D Buckner, Michael J Zvolensky, Elizabeth M Lewi. On-line personalized feedback intervention for negative affect and cannabis: A pilot randomized controlled trial. Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology. vol 28. issue 2. 2020-08-06. PMID:31204824. after controlling for baseline negative affect and cannabis use frequency, social anxiety interacted with condition to predict follow-up cannabis use frequency. 2020-08-06 2023-08-13 Not clear
Julia D Buckner, Michael J Zvolensky, Elizabeth M Lewi. On-line personalized feedback intervention for negative affect and cannabis: A pilot randomized controlled trial. Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology. vol 28. issue 2. 2020-08-06. PMID:31204824. results of this pilot study indicate a 1-session intervention that teaches simultaneously teaching skills to manage negative affect and cannabis may benefit some cannabis users with moderate to high social anxiety. 2020-08-06 2023-08-13 Not clear
Katherine Walukevich-Dienst, T Dylanne Twitty, Julia D Buckne. Sexual minority women and Cannabis use: The serial impact of PTSD symptom severity and coping motives. Addictive behaviors. vol 92. 2020-07-13. PMID:30553032. given the high rates of trauma exposure and cannabis use among smw, findings suggest that smw could benefit from exposure-based interventions in addition to cognitive behavioral skills that would teach them more adaptive strategies to manage negative affect associated with trauma exposure and ptsd symptoms. 2020-07-13 2023-08-13 Not clear
Lucy J Troup, Jeremy A Andrzejewski, Robert D Torrenc. The effects of sex and residual cannabis use on emotion processing: An event-related potential study. Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology. vol 27. issue 4. 2019-12-13. PMID:31204825. differences in the p1 were observed in both positive and negative emotion and between tasks in relation to cannabis use patterns. 2019-12-13 2023-08-13 human
Jodi M Gilman, Max T Curran, Vanessa Calderon, Randi M Schuster, A Eden Evin. Altered Neural Processing to Social Exclusion in Young Adult Marijuana Users. Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging. vol 1. issue 2. 2019-11-20. PMID:26977454. controls, but not marijuana users, demonstrated significant activation in the insula, a region associated with negative emotion, when being excluded from the game. 2019-11-20 2023-08-13 human
Kara Manning, Daniel J Paulus, Julianna B D Hogan, Julia D Buckner, Samantha G Farris, Michael J Zvolensk. Negative affectivity as a mechanism underlying perceived distress tolerance and cannabis use problems, barriers to cessation, and self-efficacy for quitting among urban cannabis users. Addictive behaviors. vol 78. 2019-07-29. PMID:29216571. the current study explored the tendency to experience negative affect (negative affectivity) as a factor accounting for the association between perceived distress tolerance and problems related to the use of cannabis. 2019-07-29 2023-08-13 human
Carrie Cuttler, Alexander Spradlin, Ryan J McLaughli. A naturalistic examination of the perceived effects of cannabis on negative affect. Journal of affective disorders. vol 235. 2019-01-14. PMID:29656267. a naturalistic examination of the perceived effects of cannabis on negative affect. 2019-01-14 2023-08-13 Not clear