25 results on '"Bruce P. Doré"'
Search Results
2. Daily Stressor-Related Negative Mood and its Associations with Flourishing and Daily Curiosity
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Perry Zurn, Emily B. Falk, Danielle S. Bassett, David M. Lydon-Staley, Bruce P. Doré, and Alexandra Drake
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Flourishing ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Stressor ,Physical health ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Negative mood ,Trait ,Curiosity ,Positive psychology ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Clinical psychology ,media_common ,Psychopathology - Abstract
There are pronounced individual differences in the extent to which affective responses are associated with daily stressor exposure. These individual differences have implications for health and well-being. We use 21 days of daily diary data in 167 participants (mean age = 25.37, SD = 7.34; 81.44% women) and test (1) the moderating effect of flourishing on daily stressor-related negative mood and (2) the moderating effect of daily curiosity on daily stressor-related negative mood. Results indicate that people high in flourishing show lower stressor-related negative mood and that stressor-related negative mood is higher than usual on days of lower than usual curiosity. Together, these findings extend a large body of work indicating associations between stressor-related negative mood and both psychopathology and poor physical health to trait and state markers of well-being.
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- 2021
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3. Neural Valuation of Antidrinking Campaigns and Risky Peer Influence in Daily Life
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Bruce P. Doré, Christin Scholz, Emily B. Falk, Nicole Cooper, Persuasive Communication (ASCoR, FMG), and ASCoR Other Research (FMG)
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Adult ,Male ,Alcohol Drinking ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Health Behavior ,Ventromedial prefrontal cortex ,Future value ,Poison control ,Peer Group ,Article ,Health Risk Behaviors ,Pregnancy ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Humans ,Conversation ,Peer Influence ,Students ,Applied Psychology ,Social influence ,media_common ,Valuation (finance) ,Motivation ,Communication ,Peer group ,Alcohol Drinking in College ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Psychology ,Social psychology - Abstract
Objective Health behavior is affected by competing sources of influence like media messages and peers. In the context of alcohol consumption, college students are targeted by antidrinking media messages, but tend to have proalcohol conversations with peers. How do humans integrate competing sources of influence on daily behavior? We observed individuals under exposure to antialcohol media messages and proalcohol conversations and tested a "common neural value" account of how contradictory influences are integrated to affect behavior. Methods Participants were instructed to cognitively regulate responses to antidrinking media messages while undergoing fMRI at baseline. Individual differences in success in message-consistent or -derogating regulation were indexed by changes in activity within the neural valuation system (ventral striatum/VS, ventromedial prefrontal cortex/VMPFC), providing a proxy for success in finding value in message-consistent/-derogating engagement. To measure peer influence, we tracked daily drinking-related conversations and drinking behavior for 30 days using mobile electronic diaries. Results Peer conversations, on average, were positive toward drinking. More positive conversations led to more future drinking, particularly for participants who showed greater neural value signals when derogating antidrinking media. Susceptibility to risky peer influence decreased with increasing success in up-regulating message-consistent neural valuation responses to antidrinking media. Neural effects were driven by VS-activity. Conclusions Results are consistent with a dynamic value integration process where contradictory influences inform a common neural value signal. Reductions in the value of a behavior (through antidrinking campaigns) may buffer against future value increases after exposure to competing influences (proalcohol peers) with important real-world consequences. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2019
4. Overlapping Functional Representations of Self- and Other-Related Thought are Separable Through Multivoxel Pattern Classification
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Jacob M. Parelman, Hang-Yee Chan, Emily B. Falk, Bruce P. Doré, Nicole Cooper, and Matthew Brook O'Donnell
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Brain Mapping ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Brain ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Human brain ,Gyrus Cinguli ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Self Concept ,Temporal Lobe ,Separable space ,Entire brain ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cortex (anatomy) ,Posterior cingulate ,medicine ,Self-reference ,Humans ,Orbitofrontal cortex ,Original Article ,Psychology ,Prefrontal cortex ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Self-reflection and thinking about the thoughts and behaviors of others are important skills for humans to function in the social world. These two processes overlap in terms of the component processes involved, and share overlapping functional organizations within the human brain, in particular within the medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC). Several functional models have been proposed to explain these two processes, but none has directly explored the extent to which they are distinctly represented within different parts of the brain. This study used multivoxel pattern classification to quantify the separability of self- and other-related thought in the MPFC and expanded this question to the entire brain. Using a large-scale mega-analytic dataset, spanning three separate studies (n = 142), we find that self- and other-related thought can be reliably distinguished above chance within the MPFC, posterior cingulate cortex and temporal lobes. We highlight subcomponents of the ventral MPFC that are particularly important in representing self-related thought, and subcomponents of the orbitofrontal cortex robustly involved in representing other-related thought. Our findings indicate that representations of self- and other-related thought in the human brain are described best by a distributed pattern rather than stark localization or a purely ventral to dorsal linear gradient in the MPFC.
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- 2021
5. The Role of Mentalizing in Communication Behaviors
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Emily B. Falk, Jacob M. Parelman, and Bruce P. Doré
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Cognitive science ,Social psychology (sociology) ,Information transfer ,Mentalization ,Process (engineering) ,Energy (esotericism) ,Psychological research ,Set (psychology) ,Psychology ,Behavioral economics - Abstract
Communication is a fundamental ability of humans, and much of our daily energy is used in producing, sharing, receiving, and understanding information and messages. As part of our capacities as information communicators and receivers, we often infer and evaluate the mental states of those people with whom we are interacting. Here we describe research from social psychology, communication, behavioral economics, and neuroscience that highlights the role of mentalizing in communication and decision-making more broadly. In this chapter, we give particular focus to the neuroscientific evidence, which shows that the mentalizing network, a set of cortical brain regions thought to preferentially process social information, is commonly activated by communicators and audiences, and facilitates successful information transfer between communicators and receivers. We close with future directions for research in psychology and neuroscience that further elucidates the role of mentalizing in communication and decision-making.
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- 2021
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6. Health news sharing is reflected in distributed reward-related brain activity
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Christin Scholz, Emily B. Falk, Elisa C. Baek, Bruce P. Doré, and Persuasive Communication (ASCoR, FMG)
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information propagation ,Brain activity and meditation ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Population impact ,AcademicSubjects/SCI01880 ,Population ,Models, Neurological ,Ventromedial prefrontal cortex ,health neuroscience ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Original Manuscript ,Neuroimaging ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reward ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,News sharing ,education ,education.field_of_study ,Brain Mapping ,Information Dissemination ,05 social sciences ,Ventral striatum ,Brain ,General Medicine ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Health information ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,valuation ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Neuroimaging has identified individual brain regions, but not yet whole-brain patterns, that correlate with the population impact of health messaging. We used neuroimaging to measure whole-brain responses to health news articles across two studies. Beyond activity in core reward value-related regions (ventral striatum, ventromedial prefrontal cortex), our approach leveraged whole-brain responses to each article, quantifying expression of a distributed pattern meta-analytically associated with reward valuation. The results indicated that expression of this whole-brain pattern was associated with population-level sharing of these articles beyond previously identified brain regions and self-report variables. Further, the efficacy of the meta-analytic pattern was not reducible to patterns within core reward value-related regions but rather depended on larger-scale patterns. Overall, this work shows that a reward-related pattern of whole-brain activity is related to health information sharing, advancing neuroscience models of the mechanisms underlying the spread of health information through a population.
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- 2020
7. Neural predictors and effects of cognitive behavioral therapy for depression: the role of emotional reactivity and regulation
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Maria A. Oquendo, Bruce P. Doré, J. John Mann, Harry Rubin-Falcone, Lauren Delaparte, Bryan T. Denny, Sudha Raman, Ronit Kishon, Jochen Weber, Kevin N. Ochsner, and Jeffrey M. Miller
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Emotions ,Precuneus ,Hippocampus ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neural Pathways ,medicine ,Humans ,Reactivity (psychology) ,Applied Psychology ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,Neural correlates of consciousness ,Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Autobiographical memory ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,030227 psychiatry ,Oxygen ,Cognitive behavioral therapy ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Major depressive disorder ,Female ,Psychology ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
BackgroundCognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is an effective treatment for many patients suffering from major depressive disorder (MDD), but predictors of treatment outcome are lacking, and little is known about its neural mechanisms. We recently identified longitudinal changes in neural correlates of conscious emotion regulation that scaled with clinical responses to CBT for MDD, using a negative autobiographical memory-based task.MethodsWe now examine the neural correlates of emotional reactivity and emotion regulation during viewing of emotionally salient images as predictors of treatment outcome with CBT for MDD, and the relationship between longitudinal change in functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) responses and clinical outcomes. Thirty-two participants with current MDD underwent baseline MRI scanning followed by 14 sessions of CBT. The fMRI task measured emotional reactivity and emotion regulation on separate trials using standardized images from the International Affective Pictures System. Twenty-one participants completed post-treatment scanning. Last observation carried forward was used to estimate clinical outcome for non-completers.ResultsPre-treatment emotional reactivity Blood Oxygen Level-Dependent (BOLD) signal within hippocampus including CA1 predicted worse treatment outcome. In contrast, better treatment outcome was associated with increased down-regulation of BOLD activity during emotion regulation from time 1 to time 2 in precuneus, occipital cortex, and middle frontal gyrus.ConclusionsCBT may modulate the neural circuitry of emotion regulation. The neural correlates of emotional reactivity may be more strongly predictive of CBT outcome. The finding that treatment outcome was predicted by BOLD signal in CA1 may suggest overgeneralized memory as a negative prognostic factor in CBT outcome.
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- 2019
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8. Population- and Individual-Level Changes in Life Satisfaction Surrounding Major Life Stressors
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Bruce P. Doré and Niall Bolger
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Gerontology ,education.field_of_study ,Social Psychology ,05 social sciences ,Population ,Life events ,Life satisfaction ,050109 social psychology ,Individual level ,050105 experimental psychology ,Clinical Psychology ,Well-being ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Life stressors ,education ,Psychology - Abstract
How do stressful life events impact well-being, and how does their impact differ from person to person? In contrast to work focusing on discrete classes of responding, the current study examines the adequacy of a model where responses to stressors are characterized by a population average and continuous variability around that average. Using decades of yearly data from a large German longitudinal study examining effects of divorce, spousal loss, and unemployment, we found that (1) in the overall population, life satisfaction was diminished for years preceding stressors and only incompletely recovered with the passage of time, and (2) there were large between-person differences around the average response, following normal and heavier-tailed continuous distributions rather than discrete classes. These findings provide a multilevel model of responses to stressors and suggest that individual differences can be understood in terms of continuous variation around what is typical for a given event and population.
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- 2017
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9. Emotion regulation deficits in regular marijuana users
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Raissa T Derckx, Bruce P. Doré, Bernd Weber, Keith M. Kendrick, Kevin N. Ochsner, Benjamin Becker, René Hurlemann, Kaeli Zimmermann, and Christina Walz
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Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Context (language use) ,Cognition ,Dysfunctional family ,Amygdala ,Mental health ,030227 psychiatry ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Marijuana use ,Neurology ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,Anatomy ,Risk factor ,Psychology ,Prefrontal cortex ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Effective regulation of negative affective states has been associated with mental health. Impaired regulation of negative affect represents a risk factor for dysfunctional coping mechanisms such as drug use and thus could contribute to the initiation and development of problematic substance use. This study investigated behavioral and neural indices of emotion regulation in regular marijuana users (n = 23) and demographically matched nonusing controls (n = 20) by means of an fMRI cognitive emotion regulation (reappraisal) paradigm. Relative to nonusing controls, marijuana users demonstrated increased neural activity in a bilateral frontal network comprising precentral, middle cingulate, and supplementary motor regions during reappraisal of negative affect (P
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- 2017
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10. Flourishing and its Associations with Affective Reactivity and Recovery to Daily Stress
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Emily B. Falk, Perry Zurn, Bruce P. Doré, David M. Lydon-Staley, Drake A, and Danielle S. Bassett
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Flourishing ,education ,Daily stress ,Psychology ,Reactivity (psychology) ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
There are marked individual differences in the impact of daily stress on health. We use trait measures of well-being, here quantified as flourishing, and daily reports of stress and negative mood to test (i) the moderating effects of flourishing on affective reactivity and recovery in response to increases in daily stress. To examine whether high curiosity acts as a resource to diminish stress effects, we additionally test (ii) the association between flourishing and curiosity and (iii) the associations between day’s curiosity and both affective reactivity and recovery. We then test for (iv) prospective associations between affective reactivity and recovery and change in flourishing over 3 months. People high in flourishing show lower affective reactivity and augmented recovery. Participants high in flourishing exhibit more frequent days of high curiosity and high curiosity buffers the effects of stress on day’s mood. Finally, greater affective reactivity is associated with longitudinal decreases in flourishing.
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- 2019
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11. Brain activity tracks population information sharing by capturing consensus judgments of value
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Bruce P. Doré, Emily B. Falk, Danielle S. Bassett, Javier O. Garcia, Jean M. Vettel, Christin Scholz, Matthew Brook O'Donnell, Elisa C. Baek, and Persuasive Communication (ASCoR, FMG)
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Male ,Adolescent ,Social Values ,Brain activity and meditation ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Decision Making ,Population ,Individuality ,Ventromedial prefrontal cortex ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Consensus theory ,Stimulus (physiology) ,050105 experimental psychology ,Judgment ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neuroimaging ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Social Behavior ,education ,Valuation (finance) ,Brain Mapping ,education.field_of_study ,Information Dissemination ,Information sharing ,05 social sciences ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Original Article ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Information that is shared widely can profoundly shape society. Evidence from neuroimaging suggests that activity in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), a core region of the brain’s valuation system tracks with this sharing. However, the mechanisms linking vmPFC responses in individuals to population behavior are still unclear. We used a multilevel brain-as-predictor approach to address this gap, finding that individual differences in how closely vmPFC activity corresponded with population news article sharing related to how closely its activity tracked with social consensus about article value. Moreover, how closely vmPFC activity corresponded with population behavior was linked to daily life news experience: frequent news readers tended to show high vmPFC across all articles, whereas infrequent readers showed high vmPFC only to articles that were more broadly valued and heavily shared. Using functional connectivity analyses, we found that superior tracking of consensus value was related to decreased connectivity of vmPFC with a dorsolateral PFC region associated with controlled processing. Taken together, our results demonstrate variability in the brain’s capacity to track crowd wisdom about information value, and suggest (lower levels of) stimulus experience and vmPFC–dlPFC connectivity as psychological and neural sources of this variability.
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- 2019
12. Toward a Personalized Science of Emotion Regulation
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Kevin N. Ochsner, Bruce P. Doré, and Jennifer A. Silvers
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Cognitive science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Identification (information) ,0302 clinical medicine ,Social Psychology ,05 social sciences ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Variation (game tree) ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,050105 experimental psychology ,Field (computer science) - Abstract
The ability to successfully regulate emotion plays a key role in healthy development and the maintenance of psychological well-being. Although great strides have been made in understanding the nature of regulatory processes and the consequences of deploying them, a comprehensive understanding of emotion regulation that can specify what strategies are most beneficial for a given person in a given situation is still a far-off goal. In this review, we argue that moving toward this goal represents a central challenge for the future of the field. As an initial step, we propose a concrete framework that (i) explicitly considers emotion regulation as an interaction of person, situation, and strategy, (ii) assumes that regulatory effects vary according to these factors, and (iii) sets as a primary scientific goal the identification of person-, situation-, and strategy-based contingencies for successful emotion regulation. Guided by this framework, we review current questions facing the field, discuss examples of contextual variation in emotion regulation success, and offer practical suggestions for continued progress in this area.
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- 2016
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13. Cognitive regulation of ventromedial prefrontal activity evokes lasting change in the perceived self-relevance of persuasive messaging
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Christin Scholz, Emily B. Falk, Matthew Brook O'Donnell, Bruce P. Doré, Nicole Cooper, and Persuasive Communication (ASCoR, FMG)
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Adult ,Male ,Persuasion ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Persuasive Communication ,Ventromedial prefrontal cortex ,Binge drinking ,Prefrontal Cortex ,050105 experimental psychology ,Binge Drinking ,Self-Control ,03 medical and health sciences ,Executive Function ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Reactivity (psychology) ,Research Articles ,media_common ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,05 social sciences ,Cognition ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Expression (architecture) ,Feeling ,Health Communication ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Anatomy ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology ,Meaning (linguistics) - Abstract
Persuasive messages can change people's thoughts, feelings, and actions, but these effects depend on how people think about and appraise the meaning of these messages. Drawing from research on the cognitive control of emotion, we used neuroimaging to investigate neural mechanisms underlying cognitive regulation of the affective and persuasive impact of advertisements communicating the risks of binge drinking, a significant public health problem. Using cognitive control to up-regulate (vs. down-regulate) responses to the ads increased: negative affect related to consequences of excessive drinking, perceived ad effectiveness, and ratings of ad self-relevance made after a one-hour delay. Neurally, these effects of cognitive control were mediated by goal-congruent modulation of ventromedial prefrontal cortex and distributed brain patterns associated with negative emotion and subjective valuation. These findings suggest that people can leverage cognitive control resources to deliberately shape responses to persuasive appeals, and identify mechanisms of emotional reactivity and integrative valuation that underlie this ability. Specifically, brain valuation pattern expression mediated the effect of cognitive goals on perceived message self-relevance, suggesting a role for the brain's valuation system in shaping responses to persuasive appeals in a manner that persists over time.
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- 2018
14. Linguistic Synchrony Predicts the Immediate and Lasting Impact of Text-Based Emotional Support
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Bruce P. Doré and Robert Morris
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Text Messaging ,Emotional support ,Process (engineering) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Emotions ,Social Support ,050109 social psychology ,Linguistics ,050105 experimental psychology ,Social relation ,Open data ,Emotional control ,Gratitude ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Interpersonal Relations ,Psychology ,Social Media ,General Psychology ,Stress, Psychological ,media_common - Abstract
Emotional support is critical to well-being, but the factors that determine whether support attempts succeed or fail are incompletely understood. Using data from more than 1 million support interactions enacted within an online environment, we showed that emotional-support attempts are more effective when there is synchrony in the behavior of support providers and recipients reflective of shared psychological understanding. Benefits of synchrony in language used and semantic content conveyed were apparent in immediate measures of support impact (recipient ratings of support effectiveness and expressions of gratitude), as well as delayed measures of lasting change in the emotional impact of stressful life situations (recipient ratings of emotional recovery made at a 1-hr delay). These findings identify linguistic synchrony as a process underlying successful emotional support and provide direction for future work investigating support processes enacted via linguistic behaviors.
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- 2018
15. Neural Mechanisms of Emotion Regulation Moderate the Predictive Value of Affective and Value-Related Brain Responses to Persuasive Messages
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Bruce P. Doré, Emily B. Falk, Lawrence C. An, Matthew Brook O'Donnell, Steven H. Tompson, and Victor J. Strecher
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Adult ,Male ,Recruitment, Neurophysiological ,Persuasion ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Emotions ,Persuasive Communication ,Ventromedial prefrontal cortex ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Affect (psychology) ,Amygdala ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Functional neuroimaging ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,education ,Reactivity (psychology) ,Research Articles ,media_common ,education.field_of_study ,Brain Mapping ,General Neuroscience ,Functional Neuroimaging ,05 social sciences ,Smoking ,Brain ,Middle Aged ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Affect ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Expression (architecture) ,Female ,Smoking Cessation ,Psychology ,Goals ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Emotionally evocative messages can be an effective way to change behavior, but the neural pathways that translate messages into effects on individuals and populations are not fully understood. We used a human functional neuroimaging approach to ask how affect-, value-, and regulation-related brain systems interact to predict effects of graphic anti-smoking messages for individual smokers (both males and females) and within a population-level messaging campaign. Results indicated that increased activity in the amygdala, a region involved in affective reactivity, predicted both personal quit intentions and population-level information-seeking and this was mediated by activity in ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), a region involved in computing an integrative value signal. Further, the predictive value of these regions was moderated by expression of a meta-analytically defined brain pattern indexing emotion regulation. That is, amygdala and vmPFC activity strongly tracked with population behavior only when participants showed low recruitment of this brain pattern, which consists of regions involved in goal-driven regulation of affective responses. Overall, these findings suggest that affective and value-related brain responses can predict the success of persuasive messages and that neural mechanisms of emotion regulation can shape these responses, moderating the extent to which they track with population-level message impact.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTPeople and organizations often appeal to our emotions to persuade us, but how these appeals engage the brain to drive behavior is not fully understood. We present an fMRI-based model that integrates affect-, control-, and value-related brain responses to predict the impact of graphic anti-smoking stimuli within a small group of smokers and a larger-scale public messaging campaign. This model indicated that amygdala activity predicted the impact of the anti-smoking messages, but that this relationship was mediated by ventromedial prefrontal cortex and moderated by expression of a distributed brain pattern associated with regulating emotion. These results suggest that neural mechanisms of emotion regulation can shape the extent to which affect and value-related brain responses track with population behavioral effects.
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- 2018
16. Toward a Personalized Science of Emotion Regulation
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Bruce P, Doré, Jennifer A, Silvers, and Kevin N, Ochsner
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Article - Abstract
The ability to successfully regulate emotion plays a key role in healthy development and the maintenance of psychological well-being. Although great strides have been made in understanding the nature of regulatory processes and the consequences of deploying them, a comprehensive understanding of emotion regulation that can specify what strategies are most beneficial for a given person in a given situation is still a far-off goal. In this review, we argue that moving toward this goal represents a central challenge for the future of the field. As an initial step, we propose a concrete framework that (i) explicitly considers emotion regulation as an interaction of person, situation, and strategy, (ii) assumes that regulatory effects vary according to these factors, and (iii) sets as a primary scientific goal the identification of person-, situation-, and strategy-based contingencies for successful emotion regulation. Guided by this framework, we review current questions facing the field, discuss examples of contextual variation in emotion regulation success, and offer practical suggestions for continued progress in this area.
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- 2018
17. Sadness Shifts to Anxiety Over Time and Distance From the National Tragedy in Newtown, Connecticut
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Leonard Ort, Bruce P. Doré, Kevin N. Ochsner, and Ofir Braverman
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Adult ,Male ,Firearms ,Databases, Factual ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Anxiety ,Violence ,Affect (psychology) ,Article ,Perception ,medicine ,Humans ,Mass Casualty Incidents ,Reactivity (psychology) ,General Psychology ,Language ,media_common ,Cognition ,Sadness ,Connecticut ,Tragedy (event) ,Female ,Grief ,medicine.symptom ,Homicide ,Psychology ,Social Media ,Social psychology ,Stress, Psychological ,Cognitive psychology ,Cognitive appraisal - Abstract
How do increasing temporal and spatial distance affect the emotions people feel and express in response to tragic events? Standard views suggest that emotional intensity should decrease but are silent on changes in emotional quality. Using a large Twitter data set, we identified temporal and spatial patterns in use of emotional and cognitive words in tweets about the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting. Although use of sadness words decreased with time and spatial distance, use of anxiety words showed the opposite pattern and was associated with concurrent increases in language reflecting causal thinking. In a follow-up experiment, we found that thinking about abstract causes (as opposed to concrete details) of this event similarly evoked decreased sadness but increased anxiety, which was associated with perceptions that a similar event might occur in the future. These data challenge current theories of emotional reactivity and identify time, space, and abstract causal thinking as factors that elicit categorical shifts in emotional responses to tragedy.
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- 2015
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18. Longitudinal effects of cognitive behavioral therapy for depression on the neural correlates of emotion regulation
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Maria A. Oquendo, Harry Rubin-Falcone, Lauren Delaparte, J. John Mann, Ronit Kishon, Kevin N. Ochsner, Bruce P. Doré, Jochen Weber, Jeffrey M. Miller, and Francesca Zanderigo
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Memory, Episodic ,Emotions ,Neuroscience (miscellaneous) ,Prefrontal Cortex ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Gyrus Cinguli ,Article ,Lingual gyrus ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prefrontal cortex ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Neural correlates of consciousness ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ,Autobiographical memory ,Depression ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,030227 psychiatry ,Cognitive behavioral therapy ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Treatment Outcome ,Mental Recall ,Major depressive disorder ,Female ,Psychology ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is effective for a substantial minority of patients suffering from major depressive disorder (MDD), but its mechanism of action at the neural level is not known. As core techniques of CBT seek to enhance emotion regulation, we scanned 31 MDD participants prior to 14 sessions of CBT using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and a task in which participants engaged in a voluntary emotion regulation strategy while recalling negative autobiographical memories. Eighteen healthy controls were also scanned. Twenty-three MDD participants completed post-treatment fMRI scanning, and 12 healthy volunteers completed repeat scanning without intervention. Better treatment outcome was associated with longitudinal enhancement of the emotion regulation-dependent BOLD contrast within subgenual anterior cingulate, medial prefrontal cortex, and lingual gyrus. Baseline emotion regulation-dependent BOLD contrast did not predict treatment outcome or differ between MDD and control groups. CBT response may be mediated by enhanced downregulation of neural activity during emotion regulation; brain regions identified overlap with those found using a similar task in a normative sample, and include regions related to self-referential and emotion processing. Future studies should seek to determine specificity of this downregulation to CBT, and evaluate it as a treatment target in MDD.
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- 2017
19. Helping Others Regulate Emotion Predicts Increased Regulation of One's Own Emotions and Decreased Symptoms of Depression
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Daisy A. Burr, Robert Morris, Bruce P. Doré, Kevin N. Ochsner, and Rosalind W. Picard
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Adult ,Male ,Social Psychology ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Helping behavior ,050109 social psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Self-Control ,Interpersonal relationship ,Social support ,Young Adult ,Gratitude ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Interpersonal Relations ,Young adult ,media_common ,Depression ,05 social sciences ,Self-control ,Helping Behavior ,Social relation ,Perspective-taking ,Female ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Social Adjustment - Abstract
Although much research considers how individuals manage their own emotions, less is known about the emotional benefits of regulating the emotions of others. We examined this topic in a 3-week study of an online platform providing training and practice in the social regulation of emotion. We found that participants who engaged more by helping others (vs. sharing and receiving support for their own problems) showed greater decreases in depression, mediated by increased use of reappraisal in daily life. Moreover, social regulation messages with more other-focused language (i.e., second-person pronouns) were (a) more likely to elicit expressions of gratitude from recipients and (b) predictive of increased use of reappraisal over time for message composers, suggesting perspective-taking enhances the benefits of practicing social regulation. These findings unpack potential mechanisms of socially oriented training in emotion regulation and suggest that by helping others regulate, we may enhance our own regulatory skills and emotional well-being.
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- 2017
20. Negative Autobiographical Memory in Depression Reflects Elevated Amygdala-Hippocampal Reactivity and Hippocampally Associated Emotion Regulation
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Odile Rodrik, Jochen Weber, Bruce P. Doré, Kevin N. Ochsner, J. John Mann, M. Elizabeth Sublette, Jeffrey M. Miller, Maria A. Oquendo, Chelsea Boccagno, Alexa D. Hubbard, and Barbara Stanley
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Adult ,Male ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Memory, Episodic ,Emotions ,Hippocampus ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Amygdala ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,mental disorders ,History of depression ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Biological Psychiatry ,Brain Mapping ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Recall ,Autobiographical memory ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Cognition ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Mental Recall ,Major depressive disorder ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background Dysregulated autobiographical recall is observed in major depressive disorder (MDD). However, it is unknown whether people with MDD show abnormalities in memory-, emotion-, and control-related brain systems during reactivity to and regulation of negative autobiographical memories. Methods We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to identify neural mechanisms underlying MDD-related emotional responses to negative autobiographical memories and the ability to downregulate these responses using a cognitive regulatory strategy known as reappraisal. We compared currently depressed, medication-free patients with MDD ( n = 29) with control participants with no history of depression ( n = 23). Results Relative to healthy control participants, medication-free MDD patients reported greater negative emotion during recall but relatively intact downregulation success. They also showed elevated amygdala activity and greater amygdala-hippocampal connectivity. This connectivity mediated the effect of MDD on negative emotional experience. When reappraising memories (vs. recalling from an immersed perspective), the MDD and control groups showed comparable recruitment of the prefrontal, parietal, and temporal cortices, and comparable downregulation of the amygdala and anterior hippocampus. However, MDD patients showed greater downregulation of the posterior hippocampus, and the extent of this downregulation predicted successful reduction of negative affect in MDD patients only. Conclusions These data suggest amygdala-hippocampal connectivity and posterior hippocampal downregulation as brain mechanisms related to elevated emotional reactivity and atypical emotion regulation in MDD.
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- 2017
21. Neural Predictors of Decisions to Cognitively Control Emotion
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Bruce P. Doré, Kevin N. Ochsner, and Jochen Weber
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General Neuroscience ,Regulation of emotion ,05 social sciences ,Decision Making ,Emotions ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Cognition ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Affect (psychology) ,Amygdala ,Brain mapping ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,050105 experimental psychology ,Arousal ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Aversive Stimulus ,Prefrontal cortex ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Research Articles ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Deciding to control emotional responses is a fundamental means of responding to environmental challenges, but little is known about the neural mechanisms that predict the outcome of such decisions. We used fMRI to test whether human brain responses during initial viewing of negative images could be used to predict decisions to regulate affective responses to those images. Our results revealed the following: (1) decisions to regulate were more frequent in individuals exhibiting higher average levels of activity within the amygdala and regions of PFC known a priori to be involved in the cognitive control of emotion and (2) within-person expression of a distributed brain pattern associated with regulating emotion predicted choosing to regulate responses to particular stimuli beyond the predictive value of stimulus intensity or self-reports of emotion. These results demonstrate the behavioral relevance of variability in brain responses to aversive stimuli and provide a model that leverages this variability to predict behavior.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTEveryone experiences stressors, but how we respond to them can range from protracted disability to resilience and growth. One key process underlying this variability is the agentic decision to exert control over emotional responses. We present an fMRI-based model predicting decisions to control emotion, finding that activity in brain regions associated with the generation and regulation of emotion was predictive of which people choose to regulate frequently and a distributed brain pattern associated with regulating emotion was predictive of which stimuli regulation was chosen. These brain variables predicted future decisions to regulate emotion beyond what could be predicted from stimulus and self-report variables.
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- 2017
22. Highly accurate prediction of emotions surrounding the attacks of September 11, 2001 over 1-, 2-, and 7-year prediction intervals
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Robert Meksin, Kevin N. Ochsner, Bruce P. Doré, Mara Mather, and William Hirst
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Adult ,Male ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,PsycINFO ,Anger ,050105 experimental psychology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Duration (philosophy) ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Prospective Studies ,General Psychology ,media_common ,Event (probability theory) ,Aged ,Affective forecasting ,05 social sciences ,Middle Aged ,United States ,Sadness ,Feeling ,Tragedy (event) ,Female ,September 11 Terrorist Attacks ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Forecasting - Abstract
In the aftermath of a national tragedy, important decisions are predicated on judgments of the emotional significance of the tragedy in the present and future. Research in affective forecasting has largely focused on ways in which people fail to make accurate predictions about the nature and duration of feelings experienced in the aftermath of an event. Here we ask a related but understudied question: can people forecast how they will feel in the future about a tragic event that has already occurred? We found that people were strikingly accurate when predicting how they would feel about the September 11 attacks over 1-, 2-, and 7-year prediction intervals. Although people slightly under- or overestimated their future feelings at times, they nonetheless showed high accuracy in forecasting (a) the overall intensity of their future negative emotion, and (b) the relative degree of different types of negative emotion (i.e., sadness, fear, or anger). Using a path model, we found that the relationship between forecasted and actual future emotion was partially mediated by current emotion and remembered emotion. These results extend theories of affective forecasting by showing that emotional responses to an event of ongoing national significance can be predicted with high accuracy, and by identifying current and remembered feelings as independent sources of this accuracy. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2016
23. 175. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Depression and the Neural Correlates of Emotion Regulation: Prediction of Treatment Outcome and Longitudinal Effects
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Bruce P. Doré, Francesca Zanderigo, Kevin N. Ochsner, J. John Mann, Jeffrey S. Miller, Bryan T. Denny, Harry Rubin-Falcone, Ronit Kishon, Jochen Weber, Lauren Delaparte, and Maria A. Oquendo
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Cognitive behavioral therapy ,Neural correlates of consciousness ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Treatment outcome ,Medicine ,business ,Biological Psychiatry ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Clinical psychology - Published
- 2018
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24. Social cognitive neuroscience: A review of core systems
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Bruce P. Doré, Noam Zerubavel, and Kevin N. Ochsner
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- 2015
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25. Brain and behavior in health communication: The Canadian COVID-19 Experiences Project
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Peter A. Hall, Geoffrey T. Fong, Sara C. Hitchman, Anne C.K. Quah, Thomas Agar, Gang Meng, Hasan Ayaz, Bruce P. Dore, Mohammad N. Sakib, Anna Hudson, and Christian Boudreau
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COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Behavior ,Prevention ,Vaccine ,Mitigation ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Background: Vaccine hesitancy and inconsistent mitigation behavior performance have been significant challenges throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. In Canada, despite relatively high vaccine availability and uptake, willingness to accept booster shots and maintain mitigation behaviors in the post-acute phase of COVID-19 remain uncertain. The aim of the Canadian COVID-19 Experiences Project (CCEP) is threefold: 1) to identify social-cognitive and neurocognitive predictors of mitigation behaviors, 2) to identify optimal communication strategies to promote vaccination and mitigation behaviors, and 3) to examine brain health outcomes of SARS-CoV-2 infection and examine their longevity. Methods: The CCEP is comprised of two components: a conventional population survey (Study 1) and a functionally interconnected laboratory study (Study 2). Study 1 will involve 6 waves of data collection. Wave 1, completed between 28 September and 21 October 2021, recruited 1,958 vaccine-hesitant (49.8%) and fully vaccinated (50.2%) adults using quota sampling to ensure maximum statistical power. Measures included a variety of social cognitive (e.g., beliefs, intentions) and neurocognitive (e.g., delay discounting) measures, followed by an opportunity to view and rate a set of professionally produced COVID-19 public service announcement (PSA) videos for perceived efficacy. Study 2 employs the same survey items and PSAs but coupled with lab-based eye tracking and functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) to directly quantify neural indicators of attention capture and self-reflection in a smaller community sample. In the final phase of the project, subjective impressions and neural indicators of PSA efficacy will be compared and used to inform recommendations for construction of COVID-19 PSAs into the post-acute phase of the pandemic. Discussion: The CCEP provides a framework for evaluating effective COVID-19 communication strategies by levering conventional population surveys and the latest eye-tracking and brain imaging metrics. The CCEP will also yield important information about the brain health impacts of SARS-CoV-2 in the general population, in relation to current and future virus variants as they emerge.
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- 2022
- Full Text
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