All Relations between Depression and emotional stimuli

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Rebecca Elliott, Karen Lythe, Rachel Lee, Shane McKie, Gabriella Juhasz, Emma J Thomas, Darragh Downey, J F William Deakin, Ian M Anderso. Reduced medial prefrontal responses to social interaction images in remitted depression. Archives of general psychiatry. vol 69. issue 1. 2012-02-22. PMID:22213787. stimuli with social context represent a distinct class of emotional stimuli, which in healthy volunteers are associated with specific neural substrates but have not previously been studied relative to vulnerability to depression. 2012-02-22 2023-08-12 human
Qin Dai, Zhengzhi Fen. Dysfunctional distracter inhibition and facilitation for sad faces in depressed individuals. Psychiatry research. vol 190. issue 2-3. 2012-02-07. PMID:21683453. depression is a commonly occurring mental disorder, which is characterized by dysfunctional inhibition and facilitation for emotional stimuli. 2012-02-07 2023-08-12 human
Volker A Coenen, Thomas E Schlaepfer, Burkhard Maedler, Jaak Panksep. Cross-species affective functions of the medial forebrain bundle-implications for the treatment of affective pain and depression in humans. Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews. vol 35. issue 9. 2012-01-19. PMID:21184778. major depression (md) might be conceptualized as pathological under-arousal of positive affective systems as parts of a network of brain regions assessing, reconciling and storing emotional stimuli versus an over-arousal of parts of the same network promoting separation-distress/grief. 2012-01-19 2023-08-12 human
Mingtian Zhong, Xiang Wang, Jing Xiao, Jinyao Yi, Xueling Zhu, Jian Liao, Wei Wang, Shuqiao Ya. Amygdala hyperactivation and prefrontal hypoactivation in subjects with cognitive vulnerability to depression. Biological psychology. vol 88. issue 2-3. 2012-01-13. PMID:21878364. the present findings raise the possibility that cognitive vulnerability to depression might be characterized by hypoactivation of the prefrontal cortex and hyperactivation of the amygdala in response to emotional stimuli; our observations might provide a potential interpretation to explain the abnormalities in neural networks mediating cognitive modulation of emotions in individuals with cognitive vulnerability to depression. 2012-01-13 2023-08-12 human
Fanny Bourgeat, Céline Borg, Nathalie Bedoin, Philippe Convers, Stéphane Billard, Aurélie Royer, Anne Grosselin, Cécile Bellot, Catherine Thomas-Antério. Explicit and implicit emotional processing modifications in pharmacoresistant left temporal lobe epilepsy and anxiodepressive disorders. Epilepsy & behavior : E&B. vol 21. issue 4. 2011-12-12. PMID:21742561. we examined whether anxiodepressive patients with left temporal lobe epilepsy could be differentiated from those with depression but without epilepsy on tasks that investigate attentional bias toward and explicit judgment of emotional stimuli. 2011-12-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
Qin Dai, Zhengzhi Feng, Ernst H W Koste. Deficient distracter inhibition and enhanced facilitation for emotional stimuli in depression: an ERP study. International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology. vol 79. issue 2. 2011-06-01. PMID:21056600. deficient distracter inhibition and enhanced facilitation for emotional stimuli in depression: an erp study. 2011-06-01 2023-08-12 human
C Naranjo, C Kornreich, S Campanella, X Noël, Y Vandriette, B Gillain, X de Longueville, B Delatte, P Verbanck, E Constan. Major depression is associated with impaired processing of emotion in music as well as in facial and vocal stimuli. Journal of affective disorders. vol 128. issue 3. 2011-04-25. PMID:20663569. the processing of emotional stimuli is thought to be negatively biased in major depression. 2011-04-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
Jackie K Gollan, Michael McCloskey, Denada Hoxha, Emil F Coccar. How do depressed and healthy adults interpret nuanced facial expressions? Journal of abnormal psychology. vol 119. issue 4. 2011-03-10. PMID:20939654. this study investigates the discrimination accuracy of emotional stimuli in subjects with major depression compared with healthy controls using photographs of facial expressions of varying emotional intensities. 2011-03-10 2023-08-12 human
Joscelyn E Fisher, Sarah M Sass, Wendy Heller, Rebecca Levin Silton, J Christopher Edgar, Jennifer L Stewart, Gregory A Mille. Time course of processing emotional stimuli as a function of perceived emotional intelligence, anxiety, and depression. Emotion (Washington, D.C.). vol 10. issue 4. 2010-11-09. PMID:20677866. time course of processing emotional stimuli as a function of perceived emotional intelligence, anxiety, and depression. 2010-11-09 2023-08-12 Not clear
R Norbury, S Selvaraj, M J Taylor, C Harmer, P J Cowe. Increased neural response to fear in patients recovered from depression: a 3T functional magnetic resonance imaging study. Psychological medicine. vol 40. issue 3. 2010-06-25. PMID:19627640. previous imaging studies have revealed that acute major depression is characterized by altered neural responses to negative emotional stimuli. 2010-06-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
Michael Browning, Emily A Holmes, Catherine J Harme. The modification of attentional bias to emotional information: A review of the techniques, mechanisms, and relevance to emotional disorders. Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience. vol 10. issue 1. 2010-06-07. PMID:20233952. a negative bias in the deployment of attention to emotional stimuli is commonly found in both anxiety and depression. 2010-06-07 2023-08-12 Not clear
Shinpei Yoshimura, Yasumasa Okamoto, Keiichi Onoda, Miki Matsunaga, Kazutaka Ueda, Shin-ichi Suzuki, Shigetoyamawak. Rostral anterior cingulate cortex activity mediates the relationship between the depressive symptoms and the medial prefrontal cortex activity. Journal of affective disorders. vol 122. issue 1-2. 2010-06-02. PMID:19589603. depression is characterized by enhanced self-referential processing of negative emotional stimuli. 2010-06-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
Greg J Siegle, Ruth Condray, Michael E Thase, Matcheri Keshavan, Stuart R Steinhaue. Sustained gamma-band EEG following negative words in depression and schizophrenia. International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology. vol 75. issue 2. 2010-05-13. PMID:20005267. this study examined whether there were group differences in baseline and sustained gamma-band eeg following emotional stimuli in healthy adults as well as adults with depression and schizophrenia. 2010-05-13 2023-08-12 Not clear
Thomas Suslow, Carsten Konrad, Harald Kugel, Daniel Rumstadt, Pienie Zwitserlood, Sonja Schöning, Patricia Ohrmann, Jochen Bauer, Martin Pyka, Anette Kersting, Volker Arolt, Walter Heindel, Udo Dannlowsk. Automatic mood-congruent amygdala responses to masked facial expressions in major depression. Biological psychiatry. vol 67. issue 2. 2010-01-07. PMID:19748075. that is, depression should potentiate emotional reactivity to negative emotional cues, whereas it should reduce reactivity in response to positive emotional stimuli. 2010-01-07 2023-08-12 Not clear
Simone Grimm, Jutta Ernst, Peter Boesiger, Daniel Schuepbach, Daniel Hell, Heinz Boeker, Georg Northof. Increased self-focus in major depressive disorder is related to neural abnormalities in subcortical-cortical midline structures. Human brain mapping. vol 30. issue 8. 2009-09-28. PMID:19117277. signal changes in the dmpfc correlated with depression severity and hopelessness whereas those in the vs and the dmt were related to judgment of self-relatedness of negative emotional stimuli. 2009-09-28 2023-08-12 human
Jutta Joormann, Bethany A Teachman, Ian H Gotli. Sadder and less accurate? False memory for negative material in depression. Journal of abnormal psychology. vol 118. issue 2. 2009-08-11. PMID:19413415. the authors used the deese-roediger-mcdermott paradigm to examine the impact of clinical depression on erroneous recall of neutral and/or emotional stimuli. 2009-08-11 2023-08-12 human
Jill M Hooley, Staci A Gruber, Holly A Parker, Julien Guillaumot, Jadwiga Rogowska, Deborah A Yurgelun-Tod. Cortico-limbic response to personally challenging emotional stimuli after complete recovery from depression. Psychiatry research. vol 172. issue 1. 2009-05-29. PMID:19452633. cortico-limbic response to personally challenging emotional stimuli after complete recovery from depression. 2009-05-29 2023-08-12 human
Jill M Hooley, Staci A Gruber, Holly A Parker, Julien Guillaumot, Jadwiga Rogowska, Deborah A Yurgelun-Tod. Cortico-limbic response to personally challenging emotional stimuli after complete recovery from depression. Psychiatry research. vol 171. issue 2. 2009-05-11. PMID:19176279. cortico-limbic response to personally challenging emotional stimuli after complete recovery from depression. 2009-05-11 2023-08-12 human
Stefanie Brassen, Raffael Kalisch, Wolfgang Weber-Fahr, Dieter F Braus, Christian Büche. Ventromedial prefrontal cortex processing during emotional evaluation in late-life depression: a longitudinal functional magnetic resonance imaging study. Biological psychiatry. vol 64. issue 4. 2008-11-03. PMID:18440493. functional imaging studies using emotional stimuli have suggested a role for the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmpfc) in the pathophysiology of midlife depression. 2008-11-03 2023-08-12 Not clear
Eric E Nelson, Deborah T Vinton, Lisa Berghorst, Kenneth E Towbin, Rebecca E Hommer, Daniel P Dickstein, Brendan A Rich, Melissa A Brotman, Daniel S Pine, Ellen Leibenluf. Brain systems underlying response flexibility in healthy and bipolar adolescents: an event-related fMRI study. Bipolar disorders. vol 9. issue 8. 2008-03-21. PMID:18076530. dysfunction in response flexibility may contribute to the pattern of behavioral and emotional dysregulation that is characteristic of bd, since depressed and manic patients respond inflexibly to emotional stimuli (i.e., anhedonia in the case of depression or inappropriate positive affect in the case of mania). 2008-03-21 2023-08-12 human