117,762 results on '"emotions"'
Search Results
2. Emotions and Client Participation in Jurisdictional Contestation.
- Author
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Bouchard, Mathieu, Cruz, Luciano Barin, and Maguire, Steve
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EMOTIONS ,CLIENTS ,SOCIAL movements ,PROFESSIONS ,FRAMES (Social sciences) - Abstract
We develop a model of how emotions shape the participation of professions' clients in episodes of jurisdictional contestation. Our model begins with a framing contest between a social movement that disrupts a profession's jurisdictional control and the profession that defends it. We theorize how, through adversarial framing efforts, the movement and profession each seek to evoke emotions in particular ways to shape the actions of clients in their favor. We then explore how the emotional resonance of this framing contest leads individual clients to support, to varying degrees, one or both contestants. We argue that clients experiencing different configurations of pride, anger, shame, and fear—or ambivalence when these emotions overlap in conflicting ways—enact one of five modes of participation. With this article, we contribute to the literature on professions by (a) conceptualizing client participation in jurisdictional contestation across analytical levels, (b) considering the role of a constellation of intertwined social emotions in this process, (c) and introducing a typology of five modes of client participation in jurisdictional contestation. We develop the model by drawing on empirical examples from health-related professions, but we also discuss its generalizability to other work domains and stakeholders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Responding to Professional Knowledge Disruptions of Unmitigable Uncertainty: The Role of Emotions, Practices, and Moral Duty among COVID-19 Physicians.
- Author
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Compagni, Amelia, Cappellaro, Giulia, and Nigam, Amit
- Subjects
PHYSICIANS ,COVID-19 pandemic ,KNOWLEDGE base ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,EMOTIONS ,DUTY ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) - Abstract
Drawing on an in-depth study of physicians facing the Covid-19 pandemic in Italy in 2020, we advance theory on how professionals in their workplace respond to knowledge disruptions associated with complex societal challenges that undermine the adequacy of their knowledge base to solve professional problems. We show that, in the context of uncertainty generated by the knowledge disruption and the inability to mitigate this uncertainty through typical knowledge-based strategies, professionals experience a trail of negative epistemic emotions. Despite these negative epistemic emotions, and motivated by a heightened sense of moral duty, professionals engage in service-oriented practices of collegial and humanistic work that depart from the knowledge-centric practices of their usual work. We detail how the repeated development of positive moral emotions when performing such practices leads professionals to ultimately consolidate and embed service-oriented practices in their professional work. Our study contributes to the literature on professions and organizations by theorizing the distinctive category of knowledge disruptions of unmitigable uncertainty and by uncovering the microlevel dynamics and mechanisms that sustain professionals' responses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Advertising Meat Alternatives: The Interactive Effect of Regulatory Mode and Positive Emotion on Social Media Engagement.
- Author
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Septianto, Felix and Mathmann, Frank
- Subjects
MEAT alternatives ,SOCIAL media ,EMOTIONS ,SOCIAL influence ,EMOTICONS & emojis ,ADVERTISING - Abstract
Drawing upon regulatory fit theory, the current work investigates how the interaction between regulatory mode and positive emotion influences consumer social media engagement with meat alternative advertisements. Social media data (N = 966) are employed to explore the interaction between regulatory mode (from the text) and positive emotion (expressed via emoji) on sharing (Study 1). Three experimental studies (N = 1,359) were subsequently conducted in the context of Facebook advertising to provide causal evidence. Each study employed different emotion manipulations (emoji in Study 2, emotion recall in Study 3, and image in Study 4). Click-through rates (in Studies 2 and 4), together with intentions to click (in Study 3), were examined as dependent variables. The findings establish that the fit effect between (a) locomotion messages and love and (b) assessment messages and awe enhance social media engagement. The mechanism driving the effect is the experience of "feeling right" arising from the fit between regulatory mode and positive emotion. The findings from this research offer valuable insights to managers involved in crafting effective social media advertising strategies with the goal of promoting meat alternatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The Effects of In-Stream Video Advertising on Ad Information Encoding: A Neurophysiological Study.
- Author
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Lee, Seungji, Kim, Jooyoung, Read, Glenna L., and Kim, Sung-Phil
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INTERNET advertising ,ENCODING ,ADVERTISING ,EMOTIONS ,VIDEOS ,INFORMATION processing ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY - Abstract
Although in-stream video advertising is common, its effects on advertisement (ad) information encoding remain unclear. We investigated the effects of in-stream video advertising by comparing two groups: those watching mid-roll (between the program) ads and those watching pre- and post-roll (before and after the program, respectively) ads. To elucidate how advertising content is encoded in the context of in-stream video advertising, we integrated two theoretical frameworks: the negative emotion–memory model (NEMM) and the limited capacity model of motivated–mediated message processing (LC4MP). We used electroencephalography (EEG) to assess negative emotions and bottom-up attention during advertisement viewing. The findings indicate that the first mid-roll ad induced negative emotions, but these feelings were attenuated during subsequent mid-rolls. In addition, negative emotions induced by mid-roll ads attenuated the role of bottom-up attention in the information encoding process. However, the pre- and post-roll ads were not accompanied by negative emotions; thus, bottom-up attention played a major role in the information encoding of these ads. The results also suggest that despite the negative emotions experienced during mid-rolls, such transient negative reactions did not affect purchase intention for the advertised products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Structural neuroanatomy of human facial behaviors.
- Author
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Noohi, Fate, Kosik, Eena, Veziris, Christina, Perry, David, Rosen, Howard, Kramer, Joel, Miller, Bruce, Holley, Sarah, Seeley, William, and Sturm, Virginia
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cingulate cortex ,emotion ,facial behavior ,primary motor cortex ,supplementary motor area ,Humans ,Female ,Male ,Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Facial Expression ,Emotions ,Gray Matter ,Middle Aged ,Brain ,Photic Stimulation ,Face ,Image Processing ,Computer-Assisted ,Brain Mapping ,Aged ,80 and over - Abstract
The human face plays a central role in emotions and social communication. The emotional and somatic motor networks generate facial behaviors, but whether facial behaviors have representations in the structural anatomy of the human brain is unknown. We coded 16 facial behaviors in 55 healthy older adults who viewed five videos that elicited emotions and examined whether individual differences in facial behavior were related to regional variation in gray matter volume. Voxel-based morphometry analyses revealed that greater emotional facial behavior during the disgust trial (i.e. greater brow furrowing and eye tightening as well as nose wrinkling and upper lip raising) and the amusement trial (i.e. greater smiling and eye tightening) was associated with larger gray matter volume in midcingulate cortex, supplementary motor area, and precentral gyrus, areas spanning both the emotional and somatic motor networks. When measured across trials, however, these facial behaviors (and others) only related to gray matter volume in the precentral gyrus, a somatic motor network hub. These findings suggest that the emotional and somatic motor networks store structural representations of facial behavior and that the midcingulate cortex is critical for generating the predictable movements in the face that arise during emotions.
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- 2024
7. Emotional interference and attentional bias in compulsive sexual behaviors disorder - An fMRI study on heterosexual males.
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Draps, Małgorzata, Kulesza, Maria, Glica, Agnieszka, Szymanowska, Julia, Lewińska, Katarzyna, Żukrowska, Weronika, and Gola, Mateusz
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attentional bias ,cognitive conflict ,compulsive sexual behaviors disorder ,emotional interference effect ,emotional processing ,problematic pornography use ,Humans ,Male ,Adult ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Heterosexuality ,Attentional Bias ,Emotions ,Stroop Test ,Sexual Behavior ,Young Adult ,Compulsive Behavior ,Brain ,Compulsive Sexual Behavior Disorder - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Despite the inclusion of the Compulsive Sexual Behavior Disorder (CSBD) in the 11th edition of the International Classification of Diseases, emotional and cognitive impairments related to CSBD remains unclear. This study aimed to investigate the behavioral and neuronal effects of emotional interference on cognition among CSBD patients. METHODS: Thirty heterosexual males with CSBD and matched healthy controls (HC) were studied with the Emotional Stroop Task using 5 categories of emotionally arousing words (sex-related, positive, fear-related, negative, neutral) during functional magnetic imaging. RESULTS: At the behavioral level, we found the main effect of the condition: sex-related words evoked a stronger Stroop effect than other conditions. At the neural level, we found a significant group effect. Among CSBD patients processing of sex-related words was related to increased activity in the right putamen, right thalamus, hippocampi, and left pulvinar, when compared to HC. We also found a negative correlation between neuronal activation and time spent on sexual activity during the week preceding study and numerous group differences in brain regions connected to the emotional and motivational processing of sexually explicit material, correlating with CSBD symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Behavioral results indicate a specific attentional bias toward sex-related stimuli in both groups, while neural data uncovered stronger reactivity to sex-related words in CSBD compared to HC. This reactivity is related to CSBD symptoms and provides evidence for the interference of sex-related stimuli with cognition. Such results are firmly in line with the Incentive Salience Theory and conceptualizing CSBD as a behavioral addiction.
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- 2024
8. Autonomic nervous system activity correlates with peak experiences induced by DMT and predicts increases in well-being.
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Bonnelle, Valerie, Feilding, Amanda, Rosas, Fernando, Nutt, David, Carhart-Harris, Robin, and Timmermann, Christopher
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Autonomic nervous system ,heart rate variability ,peak experience ,psychedelics ,sympathovagal balance ,sympathovagal coactivation ,Humans ,Male ,Hallucinogens ,Adult ,Female ,Autonomic Nervous System ,Electrocardiography ,N ,N-Dimethyltryptamine ,Heart Rate ,Emotions ,Parasympathetic Nervous System ,Young Adult ,Sympathetic Nervous System ,Middle Aged ,Double-Blind Method - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Non-ordinary states of consciousness induced by psychedelics can be accompanied by so-called peak experiences, characterized at the emotional level by their intensity and positive valence. These experiences are strong predictors of positive outcomes following psychedelic-assisted therapy, and it is therefore important to better understand their biology. Despite growing evidence that the autonomic nervous system (ANS) plays an important role in mediating emotional experiences, its involvement in the psychedelic experience is poorly understood. The aim of this study was to investigate to what extent changes in the relative influence of the sympathetic (SNS) and parasympathetic nervous systems (PNS) over cardiac activity may reflect the subjective experience induced by the short-acting psychedelic N,N-Dimethyltryptamine (DMT). METHODS: We derived measures of SNS and PNS activity from the electrocardiograms of 17 participants (11 males, mean age = 33.8 years, SD = 8.3) while they received either DMT or placebo. RESULTS: Results show that the joint influence of SNS and PNS (sympathovagal coactivation) over cardiac activity was positively related to participants ratings of Spiritual Experience and Insightfulness during the DMT experience, while also being related to improved well-being scores 2 weeks after the session. In addition, we found that the state of balance between the two ANS branches (sympathovagal balance) before DMT injection predicted scores of Insightfulness during the DMT experience, as well as subsequent sympathovagal coactivation. CONCLUSION: These findings demonstrate the involvement of the ANS in psychedelic-induced peak experiences and may pave the way to the development of biofeedback-based tools to enhance psychedelic therapy.
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- 2024
9. Decoding the influence of emotional and attentional states on self-control using facial analysis
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Aydogan, Gökhan, Kretschmer, Janek, Brewer, Gene, and McClure, Samuel M
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Biological Psychology ,Information and Computing Sciences ,Human-Centred Computing ,Psychology ,Mind and Body ,Clinical Research ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,1.2 Psychological and socioeconomic processes ,Mental health ,Humans ,Female ,Attention ,Male ,Emotions ,Self-Control ,Facial Expression ,Young Adult ,Adult ,Psychomotor Performance ,Adolescent ,Anagram task ,Fatigue ,Psychomotor vigilance task ,Self-control ,Ultimatum game - Abstract
Self-control plays a pivotal role in pursuing long-term goals related to health and financial well-being. While ample evidence suggests that humans are prone to occasional self-control lapses, little is known about how changes in emotional and attentional states affect the ability to maintain self-control. In two studies (N1 = 109 and N2 = 90), we used emotion recognition software to decode participants' facial expressions while manipulating their attentional and emotional states during a Psychomotor Vigilance Task (PVT) before exerting self-control in a subsequent task. Our findings reveal dissociable roles of attention and valence in maintaining self-control, depending on the distinct demands of the task. Specifically, performance in a subsequent cognitive task was predominantly associated with changes in attentional states during the PVT rather than valence. Conversely, preferences in a subsequent social task were associated with changes in valence states during the PVT, while attention showed no effect. This dissociation between attention-invoked and emotion-invoked lapses in self-control holds significant implications for psychological and economic models of self-control, ultimately contributing to the development of policies to mitigate the detrimental consequences of individual self-control lapses.
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- 2024
10. Early life stress is associated with greater negative emotionality and peripheral inflammation in alcohol use disorder.
- Author
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Kirsch, Dylan, Grodin, Erica, Nieto, Steven, Kady, Annabel, and Ray, Lara
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Humans ,Male ,Female ,Adult ,Alcoholism ,Adverse Childhood Experiences ,Middle Aged ,Inflammation ,Emotions ,Stress ,Psychological - Abstract
Early life stress (ELS) increases risk for psychiatric illness, including alcohol use disorder (AUD). Researchers have hypothesized that individuals with and without a history of ELS who have the same primary DSM-5 diagnosis are clinically and biologically distinct. While there is strong support for this hypothesis in the context of mood disorders, the hypothesis remains largely untested in the context of AUD. This study investigated the impact of ELS on the neuroclinical phenomenology and inflammatory profile of individuals with AUD. Treatment-seeking adults with AUD (N = 163) completed the Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Questionnaire and phenotypic battery as part of a pharmacotherapy trial for AUD (NCT03594435). Participants were classified as having no-ELS, (ACE = 0) moderate-ELS, (ACE = 1, 2 or 3) or high-ELS (ACE = 4 + ). The Addictions Neuroclinical Assessment domains incentive salience and negative emotionality were derived and used to assess the neuroclinical phenomenology of AUD. We tested (1) cumulative ELS as a predictor of ANA domains and (2) ELS group differences in ANA domains. A subset of participants (N = 98) provided blood samples for a biomarker of peripheral inflammation (C-reactive protein; CRP); analyses were repeated with CRP as the outcome variable. Greater ELS predicted higher negative emotionality and elevated CRP, but not incentive salience. The high-ELS group exhibited greater negative emotionality compared with the no-ELS and moderate-ELS groups, with no difference between the latter two groups. The high-ELS group exhibited elevated CRP compared with the no/moderate-ELS group. Findings suggest that high-ELS exposure is associated with a unique AUD neuroclinical presentation marked by greater negative emotionality, and inflammatory profile characterized by elevated peripheral CRP.
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- 2024
11. Associations between emotional reactivity to stress and adolescent substance use: Differences by sex and valence
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Rahal, Danny, Bower, Julienne E, Irwin, Michael R, and Fuligni, Andrew J
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Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Paediatrics ,Psychology ,Social Determinants of Health ,Minority Health ,Health Disparities ,Brain Disorders ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,Underage Drinking ,Pediatric ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Substance Misuse ,Women's Health ,Clinical Research ,Cannabinoid Research ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Male ,Female ,Stress ,Psychological ,Longitudinal Studies ,Sex Factors ,Emotions ,Adolescent Behavior ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Alcohol Drinking ,Depression ,Marijuana Use ,Anxiety ,adolescence ,daily diary ,drug use ,emotion response ,interpersonal stress ,Public Health and Health Services ,Business and Management ,Psychiatry ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
Although stress is often related to substance use, it remains unclear whether substance use is related to individual differences in how adolescents respond to stress. Therefore the present study examined associations between substance use and daily emotional reactivity to stress within a year across adolescence. Adolescents (N = 330; Mage = 16.40, SD = 0.74 at study entry; n = 186 female; n = 138 Latine; n = 101 European American; n = 72 Asian American; n = 19 identifying as another ethnicity including African American and Middle Eastern) completed a longitudinal study, including three assessments between the 10th grade and 3-years post-high school. At each assessment, participants reported frequency of alcohol and cannabis use and the number of substances they had ever used. They also completed 15 daily checklists, in which they reported the number of daily arguments and their daily emotion. Multilevel models suggested that more frequent alcohol and cannabis use were related to attenuated positive emotional reactivity to daily stress (i.e., smaller declines in positive emotion on days when they experienced more arguments) for both male and female adolescents. Associations for negative emotional reactivity to stress varied by sex; more frequent alcohol use and use of more substances in one's lifetime were related to greater anxious emotional reactivity to stress among female adolescents, whereas more frequent alcohol and cannabis use and higher lifetime substance use were related to attenuated depressive emotional reactivity to stress among male adolescents. Taken together, substance use was related to emotional reactivity to daily stress within the same year during adolescence, although associations differed by valence and adolescent sex.
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- 2024
12. When Your Employee Feels Angry, Sad, or Dejected.
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Bradley, Christina, Greer, Lindy, and Sanchez-Burks, Jeffrey
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EMPLOYEE attitudes ,EMPLOYEE morale ,COUNSELING of employees ,JOB performance ,EMOTIONS ,INDUSTRIAL relations - Abstract
Dealing with the negative emotions of employees isn’t easy, but knowing what to do or say can make a huge difference to their well-being, the quality of your relationships with them, and team performance. The trouble is, many leaders fail to respond at all because they think discussing emotions at work is unprofessional or worry they don’t have the right to intervene in personal matters. That’s a mistake. Research shows that teams whose leaders acknowledge members’ emotions perform significantly better than teams whose leaders don’t. In this article the authors offer a road map for providing employees emotional support. The right response depends heavily on context, in particular, whether someone (1) is working on a time-sensitive goal and (2) seems to be coping. Sometimes you have to intervene quickly; sometimes you should simply validate the employee’s feelings; sometimes you should validate and then offer advice; and sometimes you should give the person space and time. You need to assess each situation carefully and avoid the tendency to always jump in with solutions, bearing in mind that employees may not expect you to fix things; they may just need to be heard. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
13. Managing in the Age of Outrage.
- Author
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RAMANNA, KARTHIK
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LEADERSHIP ,STAKEHOLDERS ,EMOTIONS ,MANAGERIAL economics ,ORGANIZATIONAL behavior - Abstract
Almost every leader in every sector is now dealing with angry stakeholders. Even a revered company like Apple can find itself suddenly managing outrage flashpoints, both with employees and with external groups. Such encounters are nothing new; what sets this time apart is a perfect storm of three forces: (1) Many people feel unhopeful about the future. (2) Many feel, rightly or wrongly, that the game has been rigged against them. (3) Many are being drawn toward ideologies that legitimize an us-versus-them approach. The author offers a five-step framework for dealing with outrage that draws on analytical insights from disciplines as wide-ranging as the science of aggression, managerial economics, organizational behavior, and political philosophy. It forms the basis of a course he teaches at Oxford and has been built inductively through a series of deep-dive case studies on a variety of organizations, including IKEA, the London Metropolitan Police, Nestlé, and Oxford University Hospital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
14. Should Net Promoter Score be supplemented with other customer feedback metrics? An empirical investigation of Net Promoter Score and emotions in the mobile phone industry.
- Author
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Müller, Steffen, Seiler, Roger, and Völkle, Melanie
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CUSTOMER feedback ,CELL phones ,EMOTIONS ,CUSTOMER satisfaction ,SALES statistics - Abstract
Net Promoter Score (NPS) is one of the most popular customer feedback metrics (CFMs) with benefits and limitations. One limitation is that prior research has shown that NPS is not better in explaining outcome variables such as sales growth or churn than other CFMs. Most prior research, however, has not considered combinations of CFMs, CFMs related to the antecedents of customer satisfaction, and CFMs with affective components. Therefore, we argue that NPS should be supplemented with other CFMs, e.g., emotions. In an empirical investigation in the mobile phone industry, we choose Net Emotional Value (NEV) to measure of emotions. We show that a combination of NPS and NEV leads to a better explanation of two out of three outcome variables compared to using NPS only or NEV only. We also illustrate how emotional profiles and driver analyses can be used to identify the most relevant emotions of Detractors, Passives, and Promoters and conclude with limitations and potential for further research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Dimensions of wisdom perception across twelve countries on five continents.
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Rudnev, M, Barrett, Harold, Buckwalter, W, Machery, E, Stich, S, Barr, K, Bencherifa, A, Clancy, R, Crone, D, Deguchi, Y, Fabiano, E, Fodeman, A, Guennoun, B, Halamová, J, Hashimoto, T, Homan, J, Kanovský, M, Karasawa, K, Kim, H, Kiper, J, Lee, M, Liu, X, Mitova, V, Nair, R, Pantovic, L, Porter, B, Quintanilla, P, Reijer, J, Romero, P, Singh, P, Tber, S, Wilkenfeld, D, Yi, L, and Grossmann, I
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Humans ,Female ,Male ,Adult ,Judgment ,Young Adult ,Emotions ,Knowledge ,Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Cognition ,Middle Aged ,Social Perception ,Adolescent ,Perception - Abstract
Wisdom is the hallmark of social judgment, but how people across cultures recognize wisdom remains unclear-distinct philosophical traditions suggest different views of wisdoms cardinal features. We explore perception of wise minds across 16 socio-economically and culturally diverse convenience samples from 12 countries. Participants assessed wisdom exemplars, non-exemplars, and themselves on 19 socio-cognitive characteristics, subsequently rating targets wisdom, knowledge, and understanding. Analyses reveal two positively related dimensions-Reflective Orientation and Socio-Emotional Awareness. These dimensions are consistent across the studied cultural regions and interact when informing wisdom ratings: wisest targets-as perceived by participants-score high on both dimensions, whereas the least wise are not reflective but moderately socio-emotional. Additionally, individuals view themselves as less reflective but more socio-emotionally aware than most wisdom exemplars. Our findings expand folk psychology and social judgment research beyond the Global North, showing how individuals perceive desirable cognitive and socio-emotional qualities, and contribute to an understanding of mind perception.
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- 2024
16. Associations of luteal phase changes in vagally mediated heart rate variability with premenstrual emotional changes.
- Author
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Schmalenberger, Katja, Eisenlohr-Moul, Tory, Jarczok, Marc, Schneider, Ekaterina, Barone, Jordan, Thayer, Julian, and Ditzen, Beate
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Menstrual cycle ,Negative affect ,Progesterone ,Vagally mediated heart rate variability ,Humans ,Female ,Luteal Phase ,Heart Rate ,Adult ,Progesterone ,Emotions ,Affect ,Vagus Nerve ,Young Adult ,Premenstrual Syndrome - Abstract
BACKGROUND: A recent meta-analysis revealed that vagally mediated heart rate variability (vmHRV; a biomarker of emotion regulation capacity) significantly decreases in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle. As two follow-up studies suggest, these vmHRV decreases are driven primarily by increased luteal progesterone (P4). However, analyses also revealed significant interindividual differences in vmHRV reactivity to the cycle, which is in line with longstanding evidence for interindividual differences in mood sensitivity to the cycle. The present study begins to investigate whether these interindividual differences in vmHRV cyclicity can explain who is at higher risk of showing premenstrual emotional changes. We expected a greater degree of midluteal vmHRV decrease to be predictive of a greater premenstrual increase in negative affect. METHODS: We conducted an observational study with a naturally cycling community sample (N = 31, M = 26.03 years). Over a span of six weeks, participants completed (a) daily ratings of negative affect and (b) counterbalanced lab visits in their ovulatory, midluteal, and perimenstrual phases. Lab visits were scheduled based on positive ovulation tests and included assessments of baseline vmHRV and salivary ovarian steroid levels. RESULTS: In line with previous research, multilevel models suggest that most of the sample shows ovulatory-to-midluteal vmHRV decreases which, however, were not associated with premenstrual emotional changes. Interestingly, it was only the subgroup with luteal increases in vmHRV whose negative affect markedly worsened premenstrually and improved postmenstrually. CONCLUSION: The present study begins to investigate cyclical changes in vmHRV as a potential biomarker of mood sensitivity to the menstrual cycle. The results demonstrate a higher level of complexity in these associations than initially expected, given that only atypical midluteal increases in vmHRV are associated with greater premenstrual negative affect. Potential underlying mechanisms are discussed, among those the possibility that luteal vmHRV increases index compensatory efforts to regulate emotion in those with greater premenstrual negative affect. However, future studies with larger and clinical samples and more granular vmHRV assessments should build on these findings and further explore associations between vmHRV cyclicity and menstrually related mood changes.
- Published
- 2024
17. Occipital-temporal cortical tuning to semantic and affective features of natural images predicts associated behavioral responses.
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Abdel-Ghaffar, Samy, Huth, Alexander, Lescroart, Mark, Stansbury, Dustin, Gallant, Jack, and Bishop, Sonia
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Humans ,Female ,Male ,Semantics ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Temporal Lobe ,Adult ,Occipital Lobe ,Young Adult ,Emotions ,Brain Mapping ,Photic Stimulation ,Affect ,Arousal - Abstract
In everyday life, people need to respond appropriately to many types of emotional stimuli. Here, we investigate whether human occipital-temporal cortex (OTC) shows co-representation of the semantic category and affective content of visual stimuli. We also explore whether OTC transformation of semantic and affective features extracts information of value for guiding behavior. Participants viewed 1620 emotional natural images while functional magnetic resonance imaging data were acquired. Using voxel-wise modeling we show widespread tuning to semantic and affective image features across OTC. The top three principal components underlying OTC voxel-wise responses to image features encoded stimulus animacy, stimulus arousal and interactions of animacy with stimulus valence and arousal. At low to moderate dimensionality, OTC tuning patterns predicted behavioral responses linked to each image better than regressors directly based on image features. This is consistent with OTC representing stimulus semantic category and affective content in a manner suited to guiding behavior.
- Published
- 2024
18. Volatility in Expectations While Awaiting Important News
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Wilson, Melissa and Sweeny, Kate
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Social and Personality Psychology ,Psychology ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mind and Body ,Humans ,Male ,Female ,Adult ,Emotions ,Politics ,Anxiety ,Young Adult ,Middle Aged ,United States ,uncertainty ,waiting ,expectations ,volatility ,well-being ,Cognitive Sciences ,Social Psychology ,Social and personality psychology - Abstract
Waiting for important news is uniquely anxiety provoking, and expectations for one's outcome fluctuate throughout the wait. Emotional volatility is typically associated with negative outcomes, but little is known about volatility in expectations. In Study 1, law graduates (N = 248) estimated their chances of passing the bar exam every 2 weeks during the wait for results. Greater volatility in expectations, operationalized as the frequency with which outcome expectations changed during the wait, was associated with greater worry and more negative emotionality throughout the wait. Study 2 partially replicated these findings in a sample of Trump and Biden supporters (N = 444) awaiting the result of the 2020 presidential election. Study 2 also demonstrated a causal link between constrained (vs. volatile) expectations and worry. Our findings have implications for how best to manage one's expectations while awaiting important news, with the goal of minimizing worry and other negative emotions.
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- 2024
19. The Limits of Empathy.
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WAYTZ, ADAM
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EMPATHY ,LEADERSHIP ,ORGANIZATIONAL performance ,EMOTIONS ,ATTENTION - Abstract
Empathy is all the rage pretty much everywhere. It’s touted as a critical leadership skill, one that helps you influence others in your organization, anticipate stakeholders’ concerns, respond to social media followers, and even run better meetings. But it has its limits. Empathy taxes us mentally and emotionally, and can even impair our ethical judgment. It’s also a finite resource: The more we spend on one person or group, the less we have left for others. Expecting employees to continually drain their reserves can impair individual and organizational performance. Managers can prevent the ill effects of empathy and promote the good by using a few simple strategies. First, have people focus on certain sets of stakeholders, rather than asking them to understand and empathize with anyone and everyone. Second, help them meet others’ needs in ways that also address their own so that they don’t end up feeling depleted by every interaction. And third, give them empathy breaks, where they focus strictly on their own personal needs, to allow them to replenish their reserves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
20. Artificial kindness.
- Author
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Ruggeri, Amanda
- Subjects
- *
LONELINESS , *LANGUAGE models , *BEHAVIORAL medicine , *EMOTIONS - Abstract
Millions of people are turning to AI-powered chatbots for emotional support and mental health assistance. While some experts believe that AI can express empathy more openly and tirelessly than humans, others question whether AI can truly be capable of empathy and worry about the consequences of relying on machines for emotional support. AI chatbots can identify human emotions and respond appropriately, but they lack the nuanced understanding and intuitive awareness that are essential components of empathy. The effectiveness of AI empathy also depends on how users perceive and emotionally connect with the AI, and there are concerns about the potential manipulation and exploitation of emotions by AI. Despite the convenience and accessibility of AI chatbots, some argue that relying on machines for empathy may change the nature of empathy itself and hinder opportunities for genuine human connection. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
21. Can Machines Be in Language?
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Denning, Peter and Rousse, B. Scot
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- *
LANGUAGE models , *LANGUAGE & languages , *EMOTIONS , *ARTIFICIAL neural networks , *HUMAN beings - Abstract
The article discusses the limitations of large language models (LLMs) in truly understanding and participating in language. While LLMs, created through artificial neural networks and trained on vast amounts of text, can generate human-like responses, they lack essential human abilities associated with language. The author argues that language involves more than grammar and words; it encompasses expression, coordination, culture, customs, interpretation, and history, shaping our way of being in the world. LLMs, despite their linguistic capabilities, are considered to manifest an "alien intelligence" as they cannot match human ways of shaping and being shaped by language.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Emotion, Persuasion, and Team Adaptation: Advancing Theory Through Cinema.
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Munyon, Timothy P. and Summers, James K.
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TEAMS ,EMOTIONS ,PERSUASION (Psychology) ,OCCUPATIONAL adaptation ,PATHOS in motion pictures - Abstract
Contemporary models of team adaptation are highly cognitive in nature and operate under the assumption that teams possess the capacity to adapt. However, teams also face contingencies that erode their adaptability, threatening to stall or undermine the adaptation process. Anecdotes point to the ability of some teams to employ affective communication to adapt in the face of these internal or external contingencies. Drawing from cinematic examples, we consider how pathos appeals influence team adaptation. Specifically, we examine three cinematic stories in which pathos appeals were used to leverage emotion by adapting teams. These stories enhance our understanding of team adaptation in the face of difficult and often unforeseen challenges, laying the foundation for new theory and an expanded understanding of how emotion and persuasion affect team change. We discuss these implications and propose new directions for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Star Light, but Why Not So Bright? A Process Model of How Incumbents Influence Star Newcomer Performance.
- Author
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Boekhorst, Janet A., Basir, Nada, and Malhotra, Shavin
- Subjects
NEW employees ,JOB performance ,INFLUENCE ,OCCUPATIONAL prestige ,EMOTIONS ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,EMPLOYEE competitive behavior - Abstract
Star performers do not always sustain their performance edge after moving to new organizations. We offer an important explanation for whether star performers may flourish or flounder when they join a new team. Integrating insights from attribution theory and social comparison research, we present a process model explaining how incumbents make sense of star newcomer status. We propose that incumbents determine whether the star newcomer attained their star status through internal factors (e.g., ability, grit) or external factors (e.g., luck, affiliation), which gives rise to one of four distinct emotions: optimism, inspiration, shame, or envy. Incumbents who feel optimism or inspiration attempt to enhance their status through learning or helping behaviors that subsequently facilitate star newcomer performance, whereas incumbents who feel shame or envy seek to protect their status through withdrawal or destructive behaviors that hinder star newcomer performance. We further propose that the effect of incumbent behaviors on star newcomer performance is particularly likely when there is a high need for task-related interactions and complementary skills among team members. Our theoretical framework helps to advance the star newcomer literature by examining the largely overlooked influence of incumbents and highlighting the cognitive process that precedes their behavior toward star newcomers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Confronting the Contested Past: Sensemaking and Rhetorical History in the Reconstruction of Organizational Identity.
- Author
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Hampel, Christian E. and Dalpiaz, Elena
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL ideology ,SENSEMAKING theory (Communication) ,FINANCIAL technology ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,EMOTIONS - Abstract
This study explores how organizations experience and respond to identity challenges that arise due to conflicting interpretations of their past. Drawing on a case study of a fintech venture, we offer a process model that illuminates the unfolding of "temporal identity complexity," a sensemaking process that involves different members developing conflicting understandings of how the past undermines the organizational identity. Our model also reveals how leaders can restore members' beliefs in the organizational identity through "temporal synergizing," a sensegiving process that recombines conflicting interpretations of the past to support desired identity claims in the present and future. In contrast with prior research that has emphasized the need to construe a sense of identity continuity over time, we show how organizations can instead capitalize on perceived discontinuity in their past to reaffirm their identity. We discuss this and other contributions to research on organizational identity, focusing on its threads on sensemaking and rhetorical history. This includes exploring the important role that temporality and emotions play in organizational identity reconstruction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Information-based TMS to mid-lateral prefrontal cortex disrupts action goals during emotional processing.
- Author
-
Lapate, R, Heckner, M, Phan, A, Tambini, A, and DEsposito, Mark
- Subjects
Humans ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Male ,Female ,Emotions ,Adult ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation ,Goals ,Young Adult ,Brain Mapping ,Cognition ,Cues - Abstract
The ability to respond to emotional events in a context-sensitive and goal-oriented manner is essential for adaptive functioning. In models of behavioral and emotion regulation, the lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC) is postulated to maintain goal-relevant representations that promote cognitive control, an idea rarely tested with causal inference. Here, we altered mid-LPFC function in healthy individuals using a putatively inhibitory brain stimulation protocol (continuous theta burst; cTBS), followed by fMRI scanning. Participants performed the Affective Go/No-Go task, which requires goal-oriented action during affective processing. We targeted mid-LPFC (vs. a Control site) based on the individualized location of action-goal representations observed during the task. cTBS to mid-LPFC reduced action-goal representations in mid-LPFC and impaired goal-oriented action, particularly during processing of negative emotional cues. During negative-cue processing, cTBS to mid-LPFC reduced functional coupling between mid-LPFC and nodes of the default mode network, including frontopolar cortex-a region thought to modulate LPFC control signals according to internal states. Collectively, these results indicate that mid-LPFC goal-relevant representations play a causal role in governing context-sensitive cognitive control during emotional processing.
- Published
- 2024
26. Health Service Utilization in Adolescents Following a First Arrest: The Role of Antisocial Behavior, Callous-Unemotional Traits, and Juvenile Justice System Processing.
- Author
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Speck, Julianne, Frick, Paul, Vaughan, Erin, Walker, Toni, Robertson, Emily, Ray, James, Myers, Tina, Thornton, Laura, Steinberg, Laurence, and Cauffman, Elizabeth
- Subjects
Antisocial behavior ,Callous-unemotional traits ,Health service utilization ,Juvenile justice system ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Male ,Female ,Juvenile Delinquency ,Mental Health Services ,Antisocial Personality Disorder ,Emotions ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care - Abstract
Previous research indicates that youth exhibiting antisocial behavior are at risk for utilizing a disproportionate amount of health services compared to youth without these problems. The present study investigates whether being processed by the juvenile justice system and showing callous-unemotional (CU) traits independently predict health service utilization (medical and mental health service use and out-of-home placement) over and above the severity of antisocial behavior across adolescence. A total of 766 participants who had been arrested for the first time in adolescence provided data at ten appointments over a period of seven years. Results showed that self-reported antisocial behavior at the time of arrest predicted increased use of most health service use types over the next seven years (i.e. medicine prescriptions, tests for sexually transmitted infections, mental health service appointments, and out-of-home placements). All except prescription medication use remained significant when controlling for justice system processing and CU traits. Further, justice system processing added significantly to the prediction of medical service appointments. Whereas CU traits were associated with mental health service appointments and out-of-home placements, these did not remain significant when controlling for severity of antisocial behavior. These findings are consistent with prior research documenting the health care costs of antisocial behavior.
- Published
- 2024
27. Resting heart rate variability is associated with neural adaptation when repeatedly exposed to emotional stimuli.
- Author
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Min, Jungwon, Koenig, Julian, Nashiro, Kaoru, Yoo, Hyun, Cho, Christine, Thayer, Julian, and Mather, Mara
- Subjects
Default mode network ,Emotion regulation ,Functional neuroimaging ,Heart rate variability ,Neural adaptation ,Neurovisceral integration model ,Young Adult ,Humans ,Heart Rate ,Emotions ,Brain ,Neuroimaging ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging - Abstract
Higher heart rate variability (HRV) at rest is associated with better emotion regulation ability. While the neurovisceral integration model explains this by postulating that HRV can index how the brain adaptively modulates responses to emotional stimuli, neuroimaging studies directly supporting this idea are scarce. We examined the neural correlates of regulating negative and positive emotion in relation to resting HRV based on the neuroimaging and heart rate data of one hundred young adults. The results showed that those with higher HRV better recruit the medial prefrontal cortex while intensifying positive compared to negative emotion. We also examined how individual differences in resting HRV are associated with adjusting brain activity to repeated emotional stimuli. During repeated viewing of emotional images, subjects with higher resting HRV better reduced activity in the medial prefrontal cortex, posterior cingulate gyrus, and angular gyrus, most of which overlapped with the default mode network. This HRV-DMN association was observed during passively viewing emotional images rather than during actively regulating emotion. While the regulating trials can better detect task-induced changes, the viewing trials might approximate resting state, better revealing individual differences. These findings suggest two possibilities: people with higher resting HRV might have a tendency to spontaneously engage with emotion regulation or possess a trait helping emotional arousal fade away.
- Published
- 2024
28. Evidence of an active role of dreaming in emotional memory processing shows that we dream to forget.
- Author
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Zhang, Jing, Pena, Andres, Delano, Nicole, Sattari, Negin, Shuster, Alessandra, Baker, Fiona, Simon, Katharine, and Mednick, Sara
- Subjects
Humans ,Dreams ,Memory ,Emotions ,Sleep - Abstract
Dreaming is a universal human behavior that has inspired searches for meaning across many disciplines including art, psychology, religion, and politics, yet its function remains poorly understood. Given the suggested role of sleep in emotional memory processing, we investigated whether reported overnight dreaming and dream content are associated with sleep-dependent changes in emotional memory and reactivity, and whether dreaming plays an active or passive role. Participants completed an emotional picture task before and after a full night of sleep and they recorded the presence and content of their dreams upon waking in the morning. The results replicated the emotional memory trade-off (negative images maintained at the cost of neutral memories), but only in those who reported dreaming (Dream-Recallers), and not in Non-Dream-Recallers. Results also replicated sleep-dependent reductions in emotional reactivity, but only in Dream-Recallers, not in Non-Dream-Recallers. Additionally, the more positive the dream report, the more positive the next-day emotional reactivity is compared to the night before. These findings implicate an active role for dreaming in overnight emotional memory processing and suggest a mechanistic framework whereby dreaming may enhance salient emotional experiences via the forgetting of less relevant information.
- Published
- 2024
29. Automating the analysis of facial emotion expression dynamics: A computational framework and application in psychotic disorders.
- Author
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Hall, Nathan, Hallquist, Michael, Martin, Elizabeth, Lian, Wenxuan, Jonas, Katherine, and Kotov, Roman
- Subjects
emotion dynamics ,facial emotion ,facial expression analysis ,network model ,psychosis ,Adult ,Humans ,Facial Expression ,Emotions ,Psychotic Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Fear - Abstract
Facial emotion expressions play a central role in interpersonal interactions; these displays are used to predict and influence the behavior of others. Despite their importance, quantifying and analyzing the dynamics of brief facial emotion expressions remains an understudied methodological challenge. Here, we present a method that leverages machine learning and network modeling to assess the dynamics of facial expressions. Using video recordings of clinical interviews, we demonstrate the utility of this approach in a sample of 96 people diagnosed with psychotic disorders and 116 never-psychotic adults. Participants diagnosed with schizophrenia tended to move from neutral expressions to uncommon expressions (e.g., fear, surprise), whereas participants diagnosed with other psychoses (e.g., mood disorders with psychosis) moved toward expressions of sadness. This method has broad applications to the study of normal and altered expressions of emotion and can be integrated with telemedicine to improve psychiatric assessment and treatment.
- Published
- 2024
30. Storylines of family medicine V: ways of thinking—honing the therapeutic self
- Author
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Ventres, William B, Stone, Leslie A, Shapiro, Johanna F, Haq, Cynthia, Leão, Jéssica RB, Nease, Donald E, Grant, Liz, Mercer, Stewart W, Gillies, John CM, Blasco, Pablo González, De Benedetto, Maria Auxiliadora C, Moreto, Graziela, Levites, Marcelo R, DeVoe, Jennifer E, Phillips, William R, Uygur, Jane M, Egnew, Thomas R, and Stanley, Colette S
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Family Practice ,Physicians ,Family ,Cognitive Reflection ,Emotions ,Humanism ,Family ,Family Medicine ,General Practice ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Illness Behavior ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
Storylines of Family Medicine is a 12-part series of thematically linked essays with accompanying illustrations that explore the many dimensions of family medicine, as interpreted by individual family physicians and medical educators in the USA and elsewhere around the world. In 'V: ways of thinking-honing the therapeutic self', authors present the following sections: 'Reflective practice in action', 'The doctor as drug-Balint groups', 'Cultivating compassion', 'Towards a humanistic approach to doctoring', 'Intimacy in family medicine', 'The many faces of suffering', 'Transcending suffering' and 'The power of listening to stories.' May readers feel a deeper sense of their own therapeutic agency by reflecting on these essays.
- Published
- 2024
31. Assessing Animal Models to Study Impaired and Chronic Wounds.
- Author
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Saeed, Shayan and Martins-Green, Manuela
- Subjects
chronic wounds ,diabetes ,impaired healing wounds ,porcine ,pre-clinical models ,rodent ,wound healing ,Animals ,Aged ,Mice ,Humans ,Wound Healing ,Anxiety ,Biofilms ,Emotions ,Models ,Animal ,Obesity - Abstract
Impaired healing wounds do not proceed through the normal healing processes in a timely and orderly manner, and while they do eventually heal, their healing is not optimal. Chronic wounds, on the other hand, remain unhealed for weeks or months. In the US alone, chronic wounds impact ~8.5 million people and cost ~USD 28-90 billion per year, not accounting for the psychological and physical pain and emotional suffering that patients endure. These numbers are only expected to rise in the future as the elderly populations and the incidence of comorbidities such as diabetes, hypertension, and obesity increase. Over the last few decades, scientists have used a variety of approaches to treat chronic wounds, but unfortunately, to date, there is no effective treatment. Indeed, while there are thousands of drugs to combat cancer, there is only one single drug approved for the treatment of chronic wounds. This is in part because wound healing is a very complex process involving many phases that must occur sequentially and in a timely manner. Furthermore, models that fully mimic human chronic wounds have not been developed. In this review, we assess various models currently being used to study the biology of impaired healing and chronic non-healing wounds. Among them, this paper also highlights one model which shows significant promise; this model uses aged and obese db/db-/- mice and the chronic wounds that develop show characteristics of human chronic wounds that include increased oxidative stress, chronic inflammation, damaged microvasculature, abnormal collagen matrix deposition, a lack of re-epithelialization, and the spontaneous development of multi-bacterial biofilm. We also discuss how important it is that we continue to develop chronic wound models that more closely mimic those of humans and that can be used to test potential treatments to heal chronic wounds.
- Published
- 2024
32. Community Members Perceptions of a Resource-Rich Well-Being Website in California During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Qualitative Thematic Analysis.
- Author
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Heilemann, MarySue, Lai, Jianchao, Cadiz, Madonna, Meza, Jocelyn, Flores Romero, Daniela, and Wells, Kenneth
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,California ,adaptation ,digital ,emotions ,health resources ,humans ,mental health ,pandemics ,prevention ,psychological ,public health ,qualitative research ,stigma ,website - Abstract
BACKGROUND: To address needs for emotional well-being resources for Californians during the COVID-19 pandemic, the Together for Wellness/Juntos por Nuestro Bienestar (T4W/Juntos) website was developed in collaboration with multiple community partners across California, funded by the California Department of Health Care Services Behavioral Health Division federal emergency response. OBJECTIVE: This qualitative study was designed to explore and describe the perspectives of participants affiliated with California organizations on the T4W/Juntos website, understand their needs for web-based emotional health resources, and inform iterative website development. METHODS: After providing informed consent and reviewing the website, telephone interviews were conducted with 29 participants (n=21, 72% in English and n=8, 28% in Spanish) recruited by partnering community agencies (October 2021-February 2022). A 6-phase thematic analysis was conducted, enhanced using grounded theory techniques. The investigators wrote reflexive memos and performed line-by-line coding of 12 transcripts. Comparative analyses led to the identification of 15 overarching codes. The ATLAS.ti Web software (ATLAS.ti Scientific Software Development GmbH) was used to mark all 29 transcripts using these codes. After examining the data grouped by codes, comparative analyses led to the identification of main themes, each with a central organizing concept. RESULTS: Four main themes were identified: (1) having to change my coping due to the pandemic, (2) confronting a context of shifting perceptions of mental health stigma among diverse groups, (3) Feels like home-experiencing a sense of inclusivity and belonging in T4W/Juntos, and (4) Its a one-stop-shop-judging T4W/Juntos to be a desirable and useful website. Overall, the T4W/Juntos website communicated support and community to this sample during the pandemic. Participants shared suggestions for website improvement, including adding a back button and a drop-down menu to improve functionality as well as resources tailored to the needs of groups such as older adults; adolescents; the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer community; police officers; and veterans. CONCLUSIONS: The qualitative findings from telephone interviews with this sample of community members and service providers in California suggest that, during the COVID-19 pandemic, the T4W/Juntos website was well received as a useful, accessible tool, with some concerns noted such as language sometimes being too professional or clinical. The look, feel, and content of the website were described as welcoming due to pictures, animations, and videos that showcased resources in a personal, colorful, and inviting way. Furthermore, the content was perceived as lacking the stigma typically attached to mental health, reflecting the commitment of the T4W/Juntos team. Unique features and diverse resources, including multiple languages, made the T4W/Juntos website a valuable resource, potentially informing dissemination. Future efforts to develop mental health websites should consider engaging a diverse sample of potential users to understand how to tailor messages to specific communities and help reduce stigma.
- Published
- 2024
33. Diverse adolescents transcendent thinking predicts young adult psychosocial outcomes via brain network development.
- Author
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Gotlieb, Rebecca, Yang, Xiao-Fei, and Immordino-Yang, Mary
- Subjects
Adolescent brain development ,Intelligence ,Longitudinal mixed methods ,People of color ,Social cognition ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Young Adult ,Longitudinal Studies ,Brain ,Emotions ,Executive Function ,Educational Status - Abstract
Developmental scientists have long described mid-adolescents emerging capacities to make deep meaning about the social world and self, here called transcendent thinking, as a hallmark developmental stage. In this 5-years longitudinal study, sixty-five 14-18 years-old youths proclivities to grapple psychologically with the ethical, systems-level and personal implications of social stories, predicted future increases in the coordination of two key brain networks: the default-mode network, involved in reflective, autobiographical and free-form thinking, and the executive control network, involved in effortful, focused thinking; findings were independent of IQ, ethnicity, and socioeconomic background. This neural development predicted late-adolescent identity development, which predicted young-adult self-liking and relationship satisfaction, in a developmental cascade. The findings reveal a novel predictor of mid-adolescents neural development, and suggest the importance of attending to adolescents proclivities to engage agentically with complex perspectives and emotions on the social and personal relevance of issues, such as through civically minded educational approaches.
- Published
- 2024
34. Differences in the link between social trait judgment and socio-emotional experience in neurotypical and autistic individuals.
- Author
-
Zhao, Shangcheng, Cao, Runnan, Lin, Chujun, Wang, Shuo, and Yu, Hongbo
- Subjects
Guilt ,Interpersonal transgression ,Responsibility ,Social trait perception ,Humans ,Autistic Disorder ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,Judgment ,Emotions ,Guilt - Abstract
Neurotypical (NT) individuals and individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) make different judgments of social traits from others faces; they also exhibit different social emotional responses in social interactions. A common hypothesis is that the differences in face perception in ASD compared with NT is related to distinct social behaviors. To test this hypothesis, we combined a face trait judgment task with a novel interpersonal transgression task that induces measures social emotions and behaviors. ASD and neurotypical participants viewed a large set of naturalistic facial stimuli while judging them on a comprehensive set of social traits (e.g., warm, charismatic, critical). They also completed an interpersonal transgression task where their responsibility in causing an unpleasant outcome to a social partner was manipulated. The purpose of the latter task was to measure participants emotional (e.g., guilt) and behavioral (e.g., compensation) responses to interpersonal transgression. We found that, compared with neurotypical participants, ASD participants self-reported guilt and compensation tendency was less sensitive to our responsibility manipulation. Importantly, ASD participants and neurotypical participants showed distinct associations between self-reported guilt and judgments of criticalness from others faces. These findings reveal a novel link between perception of social traits and social emotional responses in ASD.
- Published
- 2024
35. Gratitude Is Morally Sensitive.
- Author
-
Zhou, Yubo, Nussberger, Anne-Marie, and Yu, Hongbo
- Subjects
appraisal ,gratitude ,morality ,socially adaptive ,Humans ,Emotions ,Morals - Abstract
Helping acts, however well intended and beneficial, sometimes involve immoral means or immoral helpers. Here, we explore whether help recipients consider moral evaluations in their appraisals of gratitude, a possibility that has been neglected by existing accounts of gratitude. Participants felt less grateful and more uneasy when offered immoral help (Study 1, N = 150), and when offered morally neutral help by an immoral helper (Study 2, N = 172). In response to immoral help or helpers, participants were less likely to accept the help and less willing to strengthen their relationship with the helper even when they accepted it. Study 3 (N = 276) showed that recipients who felt grateful when offered immoral help were perceived as less likable, less moral, and less suitable as close relationship partners than those who felt uneasy by observers. Our results demonstrate that gratitude is morally sensitive and suggest this might be socially adaptive.
- Published
- 2024
36. Anthropomorphism and Human-Robot Interaction.
- Author
-
Kim, Rae Yule
- Subjects
- *
ANTHROPOMORPHISM , *HUMANOID robots , *HUMAN-robot interaction , *COGNITION , *EMOTIONS , *UNCANNY valley theory - Abstract
Exploring how human apppreciation for and interactions with robots are influenced by anthropomorphic features. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. How Our Brains Decide When to Trust.
- Author
-
ZAK, PAUL J.
- Subjects
TRUST ,CUSTOMER relations ,BEHAVIORAL neuroscience ,JOB satisfaction ,CORPORATE culture ,OXYTOCIN ,HABIT ,EMOTIONS - Abstract
A reprint of the article "How Our Brains Decide When to Trust" by Paul J. Zak, which was published on HBR.org on July 18, 2019, is presented. The relationship between trust, job satisfaction, and customer service are discussed. Additional topics include the biology of trust including the functions of the cerebral cortex and empathy, the effects of the hormone oxytocin, fear and domination, and the power of habits.
- Published
- 2023
38. Mapping the experiences of work-life balance: implications for the future of work
- Author
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Gupta, Shubhi, Vasa, Sireesha Rani, and Sehgal, Prachee
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Upsetting the Balance: How Modifiable Risk Factors Contribute to the Progression of Alzheimers Disease.
- Author
-
Carroll, Caitlin and Benca, Ruth
- Subjects
Alzheimer’s disease ,aging ,amyloid-beta (Aβ) ,lifestyle interventions ,metabolism ,sleep ,Humans ,Aged ,Alzheimer Disease ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,Sleep ,Emotions ,Risk Factors - Abstract
Alzheimers disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder affecting nearly one in nine older adults in the US. This number is expected to grow exponentially, thereby increasing stress on caregivers and health systems. While some risk factors for developing AD are genetic, an estimated 1/3 of AD cases are attributed to lifestyle. Many of these risk factors emerge decades before clinical symptoms of AD are detected, and targeting them may offer more efficacious strategies for slowing or preventing disease progression. This review will focus on two common risk factors for AD, metabolic dysfunction and sleep impairments, and discuss potential mechanisms underlying their relationship to AD pathophysiology. Both sleep and metabolism can alter AD-related protein production and clearance, contributing to an imbalance that drives AD progression. Additionally, these risk factors have bidirectional relationships with AD, where the presence of AD-related pathology can further disrupt sleep and worsen metabolic functioning. Sleep and metabolism also appear to have a bidirectional relationship with each other, indirectly exacerbating AD pathophysiology. Understanding the mechanisms involved in these relationships is critical for identifying new strategies to slow the AD cascade.
- Published
- 2024
40. Interactions between classic psychedelics and serotonergic antidepressants: Effects on the acute psychedelic subjective experience, well-being and depressive symptoms from a prospective survey study.
- Author
-
Erritzoe, David, Barbut Siva, Jessica, Barba, Tommaso, Kettner, Hannes, Kuc, Joanna, Nutt, David, and Carhart-Harris, Robin
- Subjects
Serotonergic antidepressants ,classic psychedelics ,depressive symptoms ,subjective experience ,well-being ,Humans ,Hallucinogens ,Prospective Studies ,Depression ,Antidepressive Agents ,Emotions - Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is growing evidence for the therapeutic effects of psychedelics. However, it is still uncertain how these drugs interact with serotonergic antidepressants (serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SRIs)). OBJECTIVE: This study explores the interaction between psychedelics and SRIs in terms of therapeutic effects. The objective is to compare acute psychedelic effects and subsequent changes in well-being and depressive symptoms among SRI - individuals (not on psychiatric medication) and SRI + individuals (undergoing SRI treatment). METHODS: Using prospective survey data, the study employs multivariate analysis of covariance (MANCOVA) and linear mixed effect models to analyse subjective differences and changes in well-being and depressive symptoms pre- and post-psychedelic experiences. RESULTS: Results indicate that SRI - participants experience significantly more intense subjective effects compared to SRI + participants (F = 3.200, p = 0.016) in MANCOVA analysis. Further analysis reveals SRI - individuals report stronger mystical (18.2% higher, p = 0.048), challenging (50.9% higher, p = 0.001) and emotional breakthrough experiences (31.9% higher, p = 0.02) than SRI + individuals. No differences are observed in drug-induced visual effects (p = 0.19). Both groups exhibited similar improvements in well-being and depressive symptoms after the psychedelic experience. CONCLUSION: Individuals presumed to be on serotonergic antidepressants during psychedelic use display reduced subjective effects but similar antidepressant effects compared to those not undergoing SRI treatment. Further controlled research is needed to comprehend the interplay between serotonergic antidepressants and psychedelics, illuminating potential therapeutic benefits and limitations in clinical contexts.
- Published
- 2024
41. Fluency, prediction and motivation: how processing dynamics, expectations and epistemic goals shape aesthetic judgements.
- Author
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Yoo, Jenny, Jasko, Katarzyna, and Winkielman, Piotr
- Subjects
aesthetics ,epistemic motivation model ,evaluation ,fluency ,predictive processing framework ,Animals ,Judgment ,Motivation ,Goals ,Emotions ,Esthetics ,Lepidoptera - Abstract
What psychological mechanisms underlie aesthetic judgements? An influential account known as the Hedonic Marking of Fluency, later developed into a Processing Fluency Theory of Aesthetic Pleasure, posits that ease of processing elicits positive feelings and thus enhances stimulus evaluations. However, the theory faces empirical and conceptual challenges. In this paper, we extend it by integrating insights from predictive processing frameworks (PPF) and the epistemic motivation model (EMM). We propose four extensions. First, fluency of a stimulus depends on perceivers expectations-their internal model of the world. Second, perceivers also form expectations about fluency itself and thus can experience surprising fluency. These expectations can come from the individuals history, their current task and their environment. Third, perceivers can value fluency but also disfluency, reflecting their non-directional epistemic goals. Fourth, perceivers also have directional epistemic goals, preferring specific conclusions or belief content. Consequently, affective reactions depend on whether the stimulus satisfies those goals. These directional epistemic goals may override concerns about fluency or change the value of fluency associated with specific content. We review supporting evidence and introduce novel predictions. By integrating insights from PPF and EMM, our framework can better capture established fluency effects and highlights their limitations and extensions. This article is part of the theme issue Art, aesthetics and predictive processing: theoretical and empirical perspectives.
- Published
- 2024
42. Parental emotionality is related to preschool children’s neural responses to emotional faces
- Author
-
Xia, Ruohan, Heise, Megan J, and Bowman, Lindsay C
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Neurosciences ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mind and Body ,Mental health ,Humans ,Child ,Preschool ,Emotions ,Parents ,Anger ,Fear ,Brain ,Evoked Potentials ,Facial Expression ,emotion perception ,parental emotionality ,event-related potentials ,neural correlates ,children ,Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
The ability to accurately decode others' facial expressions is essential for successful social interaction. Previous theories suggest that aspects of parental emotionality-the frequency, persistence and intensity of parents' own emotions-can influence children's emotion perception. Through a combination of mechanisms, parental emotionality may shape how children's brains specialize to respond to emotional expressions, but empirical data are lacking. The present study provides a direct empirical test of the relation between the intensity, persistence and frequency of parents' own emotions and children's neural responses to perceiving emotional expressions. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded as typically developing 3- to 5-year-old children (final Ns = 59 and 50) passively viewed faces expressing different emotional valences (happy, angry and fearful) at full and reduced intensity (100% intense expression and 40% intense expression). We examined relations between parental emotionality and children's mean amplitude ERP N170 and negative central responses. The findings demonstrate a clear relation between parental emotionality and children's neural responses (in the N170 mean amplitude and latency) to emotional expressions and suggest that parents may influence children's emotion-processing neural circuitry.
- Published
- 2024
43. Awake ripples enhance emotional memory encoding in the human brain.
- Author
-
Zhang, Haoxin, Skelin, Ivan, Ma, Shiting, Paff, Michelle, Mnatsakanyan, Lilit, Yassa, Michael, Knight, Robert, and Lin, Jack
- Subjects
Humans ,Wakefulness ,Hippocampus ,Amygdala ,Emotions ,Electrophysiological Phenomena ,Memory Consolidation - Abstract
Enhanced memory for emotional experiences is hypothesized to depend on amygdala-hippocampal interactions during memory consolidation. Here we show using intracranial recordings from the human amygdala and the hippocampus during an emotional memory encoding and discrimination task increased awake ripples after encoding of emotional, compared to neutrally-valenced stimuli. Further, post-encoding ripple-locked stimulus similarity is predictive of later memory discrimination. Ripple-locked stimulus similarity appears earlier in the amygdala than in hippocampus and mutual information analysis confirms amygdala influence on hippocampal activity. Finally, the joint ripple-locked stimulus similarity in the amygdala and hippocampus is predictive of correct memory discrimination. These findings provide electrophysiological evidence that post-encoding ripples enhance memory for emotional events.
- Published
- 2024
44. The psychological, computational, and neural foundations of indebtedness.
- Author
-
Gao, Xiaoxue, Jolly, Eshin, Liu, Huiying, Zhou, Xiaolin, Chang, Luke, and Yu, Hongbo
- Subjects
Humans ,Guilt ,Emotions ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Altruism ,Intention ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging - Abstract
Receiving a favor from another person may induce a negative feeling of indebtedness for the beneficiary. In this study, we explore these hidden costs by developing and validating a conceptual model of indebtedness across three studies that combine a large-scale online questionnaire, an interpersonal game, computational modeling, and neuroimaging. Our model captures how individuals perceive the altruistic and strategic intentions of the benefactor. These inferences produce distinct feelings of guilt and obligation that together comprise indebtedness and motivate reciprocity. Perceived altruistic intentions convey care and communal concern and are associated with activity in insula, ventromedial prefrontal cortex and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, while inferred strategic intentions convey expectations of future reciprocity and are associated with activation in temporal parietal junction and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex. We further develop a neural utility model of indebtedness using multivariate patterns of brain activity that captures the tradeoff between these feelings and reliably predicts reciprocity behavior.
- Published
- 2024
45. Long-term consequences of mothers and fathers wartime deployments: Protocol for a two-wave panel study.
- Author
-
MacDermid Wadsworth, Shelley, Topp, Dave, Lester, Patricia, Stander, Valerie, Christ, Sharon, Whiteman, Shawn, and Knobloch, Leanne
- Subjects
Male ,Child ,Adolescent ,Humans ,Female ,Fathers ,Mothers ,Parents ,Emotions ,Military Personnel - Abstract
Multiple adjustment difficulties have been associated with childrens exposure to recent parental wartime military deployments, but long-term consequences have not yet been systematically studied. This investigation will assess direct and indirect relationships between exposures to parental deployments early in life and later youth adjustment. Parents psychological health and family processes will be examined as mediators, and parents and childrens vulnerability and support will be examined as moderators. Archival data will be combined with new data gathered from two children and up to two parents in families where children will be aged 11 to 16 at the first data collection and will have experienced at least one parental deployment, for at least one child prior to age 6. Data are being gathered via telephone interviews and web-based surveys conducted twice one year apart. Outcomes are indicators of childrens social-emotional development, behavior, and academic performance. Notable features of this study include oversampling of female service members, inclusion of siblings, and inclusion of families of both veterans and currently serving members. This study has potentially important implications for schools, community organizations and health care providers serving current and future cohorts of military and veteran families.
- Published
- 2024
46. Heightened neural activity and functional connectivity responses to social rejection in female adolescents at risk for depression: Testing the Social Signal Transduction Theory of Depression
- Author
-
Shields, Grant S, Vinograd, Meghan, Bui, Theresa, Sichko, Stassja, Irwin, Michael R, and Slavich, George M
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Mental Illness ,Mental Health ,Neurosciences ,Serious Mental Illness ,Depression ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Major Depressive Disorder ,Pediatric ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Neurological ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Female ,Depressive Disorder ,Major ,Emotions ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Social Status ,Risk Factors ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Neural ,Connectivity ,Social stress ,Mechanisms ,Risk ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundAlthough social rejection is among the strongest proximal precipitants of major depressive disorder (MDD), little is known about the underlying neurobiological mechanisms and whether neural sensitivity to social rejection may help explain differences in MDD risk. To address this issue, we tested whether neural responses to social threat differed in female adolescents at high vs. low maternal risk for MDD.MethodFemale adolescents with (high-risk; n = 22, Mage = 14.68) and without (low-risk; n = 30, Mage = 15.07) a maternal history of depression were experimentally exposed to negative and neutral social evaluation while undergoing an fMRI scan. Neural responses were assessed by event-related activity and functional connectivity, as well as multivoxel pattern analysis. Activity and functional connectivity analyses focused on a priori-selected regions of interest implicated in self-referential processing and emotion regulation.ResultsCompared to low-risk female adolescents, high-risk female adolescents exhibited greater increases in self-reported depression and social disconnection following social evaluation. Moreover, compared to low-risk female adolescents, high-risk female adolescents exhibited greater amygdala responses to negative social evaluation and a differential pattern of functional connectivity in brain regions related to emotion regulation, self-referential processing, and negative affect. Additionally, these markers of neural threat reactivity were related to depressive symptoms.LimitationsA cross-sectional study design and relatively small, Western sample.ConclusionsThese results suggest that exaggerated neural reactivity to social threat-and an atypical pattern of related functional connectivity-is evident in individuals with a preclinical risk factor for depression. Targeting such responding may thus be a fruitful strategy for preventing depression in at-risk youth.
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- 2024
47. Wildfires and social media discourse: exploring mental health and emotional wellbeing through Twitter
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García, Yury E, Villa-Pérez, Miryam Elizabeth, Li, Kuang, Tai, Xiao Hui, Trejo, Luis A, Daza-Torres, Maria L, Montesinos-López, J Cricelio, and Nuño, Miriam
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Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Good Health and Well Being ,Social Media ,Humans ,Wildfires ,California ,Emotions ,mental health ,wildfire ,X ,wildfire emotional impact ,sentiment analysis ,LIWC ,topic modeling ,Tubbs Fire ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
IntroductionThe rise in global temperatures due to climate change has escalated the frequency and intensity of wildfires worldwide. Beyond their direct impact on physical health, these wildfires can significantly impact mental health. Conventional mental health studies predominantly rely on surveys, often constrained by limited sample sizes, high costs, and time constraints. As a result, there is an increasing interest in accessing social media data to study the effects of wildfires on mental health.MethodsIn this study, we focused on Twitter users affected by the California Tubbs Fire in 2017 to extract data signals related to emotional well-being and mental health. Our analysis aimed to investigate tweets posted during the Tubbs Fire disaster to gain deeper insights into their impact on individuals. Data were collected from October 8 to October 31, 2017, encompassing the peak activity period. Various analytical methods were employed to explore word usage, sentiment, temporal patterns of word occurrence, and emerging topics associated with the unfolding crisis.ResultsThe findings show increased user engagement on wildfire-related Tweets, particularly during nighttime and early morning, especially at the onset of wildfire incidents. Subsequent exploration of emotional categories using Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (LIWC) revealed a substantial presence of negative emotions at 43.0%, juxtaposed with simultaneous positivity in 23.1% of tweets. This dual emotional expression suggests a nuanced and complex landscape, unveiling concerns and community support within conversations. Stress concerns were notably expressed in 36.3% of the tweets. The main discussion topics were air quality, emotional exhaustion, and criticism of the president's response to the wildfire emergency.DiscussionSocial media data, particularly the data collected from Twitter during wildfires, provides an opportunity to evaluate the psychological impact on affected communities immediately. This data can be used by public health authorities to launch targeted media campaigns in areas and hours where users are more active. Such campaigns can raise awareness about mental health during disasters and connect individuals with relevant resources. The effectiveness of these campaigns can be enhanced by tailoring outreach efforts based on prevalent issues highlighted by users. This ensures that individuals receive prompt support and mitigates the psychological impacts of wildfire disasters.
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- 2024
48. Personal value of Alzheimers disease biomarker testing and result disclosure from the patient and care partner perspective.
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Patel, Khushbu, Yang, David, Feldman, Howard, Hsiung, Ging-Yuek, Nygaard, Haakon, Best, John, Dwosh, Emily, Robillard, Julie, and DeMarco, Mari
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Alzheimer disease ,biomarkers ,caregivers ,cerebrospinal fluid ,counseling ,decision making ,dementia ,diagnosis ,disclosure ,emotions ,life style ,patients - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: We described patients and care partners experiences with Alzheimers disease (AD) cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarker testing and result disclosure in routine care. METHODS: IMPACT-AD BC is an observational study of clinic patients who underwent AD CSF biomarker testing as part of their routine medical care (n = 142). In the personal utility arm of the study, semi-structured phone interviews were conducted with a subset of patients (n = 34), and separately with their care partners (n = 31). Post-disclosure interviews were conducted ∼1 month and ∼6 months after biomarker result disclosure and investigated the patients decision-making process around testing, impact of receiving results, wellness and lifestyle changes, and future planning. RESULTS: A majority of patients (90%) rated their decision to undergo testing as easy. Post-disclosure, the majority (82%) reported overall positive feelings from having greater certainty and the ability to plan ahead, and results spurred them to adopt/continue healthy behaviors such as exercise (84%) and cognitive activities (54%). Care partners expressed relief from having more diagnostic certainty, increased appreciation of future caregiving responsibilities, and a desire to connect with support resources. DISCUSSION: Perspectives of persons with lived experience in dementia provide new insight into the value of biomarker testing and should be included as part of evidence-guided considerations for pre-test counseling and result disclosure. Moreover, study findings identify an interval when patients and care partners are highly receptive to positive lifestyle and medical interventions.
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- 2024
49. Threat exposure moderates associations between neural and physiological indices of emotion reactivity in adolescent females.
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Gruhn, Meredith, Miller, Adam, Eisenlohr-Moul, Tory, Martin, Sophia, Clayton, Matthew, Giletta, Matteo, Nock, Matthew, Rudolph, Karen, Slavich, George, Prinstein, Mitchell, Sheridan, Margaret, and Hastings, Paul
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Amygdala ,Cortisol ,Early life adversity ,Hippocampus ,Neural ,Threat ,Humans ,Female ,Adolescent ,Child ,Hydrocortisone ,Emotions ,Amygdala ,Brain ,Frontal Lobe ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Stress ,Psychological - Abstract
Early life adversity (ELA) characterized by threat (e.g., abuse, witnessing violence) impacts neural and physiologic systems involved in emotion reactivity; however, research on how threat exposure impacts the interplay between these systems is limited. This study investigates ELA characterized by threat as a potential moderator of the association between (a) neural activity during a negative image processing fMRI task and (b) cortisol production following a modified Trier Social Stress Test (TSST). The sample is comprised of 117 young adolescent females (Mage = 11.90 years, SD = 1.69) at elevated risk for internalizing problems. Whole-brain analyses revealed a positive association between cortisol production and increased right lateral orbitofrontal cortex activity during the emotion reactivity task. In moderation models, threat exposure interacted with bilateral amygdala activation (b = -3.34, p = 0.021) and bilateral hippocampal activation (b = -4.14, p = 0.047) to predict cortisol response to the TSST. Specifically, participants with low, but not high, levels of threat exposure demonstrated a positive association between cortisol production and neural activity in these regions, while no significant association emerged for participants with high threat exposure. Findings contribute to the growing field of research connecting physiological and neural emotion processing and response systems, suggesting that dimensions of ELA may uniquely disrupt associations between neural activation and cortisol production.
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- 2024
50. Measuring the experience of social connection within specific social interactions: The Connection During Conversations Scale (CDCS).
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Okabe-Miyamoto, Karynna, Ozer, Daniel, Lyubomirsky, Sonja, and Walsh, Lisa
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Humans ,Emotions ,Loneliness ,Friends ,Social Interaction ,Chenodeoxycholic Acid - Abstract
Decades of research have demonstrated that social connection is fundamental to health and well-being. The benefits of connection are observed with both close and distant others, within both new and established relationships, and even with exchanges that unfold over a relatively short timeframe. Because social connection is fundamental to well-being, many existing measures in the literature aim to assess either a global sense of connection or partner-specific (relationship-specific) connection. What is missing are measures of connection felt in specific social interactions or conversations. In three studies (Study 1: N = 351; Study 2: Time 1 N = 397, Time 2 N = 336, Time 3 N = 299; Study 3: N = 235), we developed the Connection During Conversations Scale (CDCS), a 14-item measure of conversation-specific social connection that assesses connection experienced during a social interaction (or conversation). Confirmatory factor analyses demonstrated that a four-factor model fit our samples well, which resulted in four subscales: Shared Reality, Partner Responsiveness, Participant Interest, and Affective Experience. The overall CDCS measure, along with its four subscales, was significantly correlated with established measures of loneliness, partner responsiveness, relatedness, positivity resonance, and shared reality. Because of the importance of frequent interactions-whether with family, friends, coworkers, or strangers-our new scale will allow researchers to better understand how, when, and where such conversations may contribute to social connection and well-being. (225 words).
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- 2024
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