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  3. Neural correlates of immediate and prolonged effects of cognitive reappraisal and distraction on emotional experience
 

Neural correlates of immediate and prolonged effects of cognitive reappraisal and distraction on emotional experience

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.100975
Publisher DOI
10.1007/s11682-016-9603-9
PubMed ID
27709512
Description
Cognitive emotion regulation strategies are important components of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT). Additionally, up-regulation and difficulties in the down-regulation of negative feelings are associated with mental disorders. However, little is known about the lasting effects of cognitive emotion regulation strategies on emotional experience and associated neural activation. Therefore, this study investigated immediate and prolonged effects of emotion regulation using cognitive reappraisal and distraction on subjective report and its neural correlates. Twenty-seven healthy females took part in a 2-day functional magnetic resonance imaging study. They were instructed to either up-regulate or down-regulate their negative feelings using a situation-focused cognitive reappraisal strategy, to distract themselves by imagining a specific neutral situation, or to passively look at repeatedly presented aversive and neutral pictures. Re-exposure to the same stimuli without a regulation instruction was conducted one day later. Self-reported negative feelings and blood-oxygen-level-dependent responses served as main outcome variables. As expected, the results show successful immediate up- or down-regulation of negative feelings by cognitive reappraisal and down-regulation of negative feelings by distraction. Furthermore, these changes in negative feelings were correlated with amygdala activation. A lasting effect on emotional experience associated with stronger ventromedial prefrontal cortex activation was found for down-regulation of negative feelings via cognitive reappraisal. Compared to distraction, down-regulation via cognitive reappraisal led to reduced negative feelings and stronger dorso- and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex responses one day later. While cognitive reappraisal and distraction are both effective strategies during active regulation, only cognitive reappraisal had a lasting effect. These findings might have implications for CBT.
Date of Publication
2017-10
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
100 Philosophy > 150 Psychology
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Hermann, Andrea
Kress, Laura
Institut für Psychologie, Allgemeine Psychologie und Neuropsychologie
Stark, Rudolf
Additional Credits
Institut für Psychologie, Allgemeine Psychologie und Neuropsychologie
Series
Brain imaging and behavior
Publisher
Springer
ISSN
1931-7557
Access(Rights)
open.access
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