Publication |
Sentence |
Publish Date |
Extraction Date |
Species |
Stefanie L Sequeira, Julianne M Griffith, T H Stanley Seah, Kiera M James, Cecile D Ladouceur, Jennifer S Sil. Real-World Social Reward Processes are Linked to Momentary Positive Affect in Adolescent Girls. Research on child and adolescent psychopathology. 2024-12-12. PMID:39666125. |
reduced interest or reward in peer interactions may contribute to social anxiety and depression in girls through effects on positive affect (pa), though associations between social anhedonia and momentary pa have yet to be tested. |
2024-12-12 |
2024-12-14 |
Not clear |
Sunkyung Yoon, Heejoo Kim, Sooyeon Kim, Yunsu Kim, Eunbi Kan. The role of desired positive affect in depression in daily life. Journal of behavior therapy and experimental psychiatry. vol 86. 2024-12-03. PMID:39626973. |
the role of desired positive affect in depression in daily life. |
2024-12-03 |
2024-12-06 |
Not clear |
Simon E Blackwell, Angela Rölver, Jürgen Margraf, Marcella L Wou. The effect of positive mental imagery versus positive verbal thoughts on anhedonia. Applied psychology. Health and well-being. 2024-11-19. PMID:39558569. |
compared to participants who generated sentences, participants who generated imagery showed greater improvements from pre- to post-training on an individualized multi-facetted measure of anhedonia (the dimensional anhedonia rating scale), but not on standardized measures of anticipated pleasure (the snaith-hamilton pleasure scale), depression symptoms, or positive affect. |
2024-11-19 |
2024-11-22 |
human |
b' Brage Kraft, Ragnhild B\\xc3\\xb8, Catherine J Harmer, Nils Inge Landr\\xc3\\xb. The effect of attentional bias modification on positive affect dynamics. Scientific reports. vol 14. issue 1. 2024-10-09. PMID:39384616.' |
negative attentional bias and alterations in positive affect dynamics constitute emotional vulnerability to depression. |
2024-10-09 |
2024-10-12 |
human |
b' Brage Kraft, Ragnhild B\\xc3\\xb8, Catherine J Harmer, Nils Inge Landr\\xc3\\xb. The effect of attentional bias modification on positive affect dynamics. Scientific reports. vol 14. issue 1. 2024-10-09. PMID:39384616.' |
in this randomized controlled trial, we examined whether abm leads to changes in positive affect dynamics in a sample with an emotional vulnerability to depression (n = 65). |
2024-10-09 |
2024-10-12 |
human |
Juan Shan, Xiaowen Q. Effects of Music Therapy in the Context of Positive Emotions, Engagement, Relationships, Meaning and Accomplishment (PERMA) on Negative Emotions in Patients with Mild-to-Moderate Depression. Noise & health. vol 26. issue 122. 2024-09-30. PMID:39345078. |
effects of music therapy in the context of positive emotions, engagement, relationships, meaning and accomplishment (perma) on negative emotions in patients with mild-to-moderate depression. |
2024-09-30 |
2024-10-02 |
Not clear |
Juan Shan, Xiaowen Q. Effects of Music Therapy in the Context of Positive Emotions, Engagement, Relationships, Meaning and Accomplishment (PERMA) on Negative Emotions in Patients with Mild-to-Moderate Depression. Noise & health. vol 26. issue 122. 2024-09-30. PMID:39345078. |
this study explores the effects of music therapy under the framework of positive emotions, engagement, relationships, meaning, and accomplishment (perma) on the negative emotions and quality of life (qol) in patients with digestive diseases and mild-to-moderate depression in a general hospital. |
2024-09-30 |
2024-10-02 |
Not clear |
Casey D Xavier Hall, Kristen Ethier, Peter Cummings, Angela Freeman, Katrin Bovbjerg, Jacqueline Bannon, Andrea Dakin, Fay Abujado, Nora Bouacha, Devan Derricotte, Lakethia Patterson, Lisa R Hirschhorn, Alida Bouris, Judith T Moskowit. A hybrid type II effectiveness-implementation trial of a positive emotion regulation intervention among people living with HIV engaged in Ryan White Medical Case Management: protocol and design for the ORCHID study. Trials. vol 25. issue 1. 2024-09-28. PMID:39334472. |
a growing body of research suggests that interventions that promote positive emotion may lessen symptoms of depression and improve physical and psychological well-being among people experiencing a variety of health-related stress, including living with hiv. |
2024-09-28 |
2024-10-01 |
Not clear |
Gabriele Prati, Anthony D Mancin. Trajectories of depressive symptoms and subjective well-being before and after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic: Two six-year longitudinal studies. Journal of psychiatric research. vol 178. 2024-08-27. PMID:39191202. |
three additional trajectories of chronic/low, upright u-shaped, and inverted u-shaped emerged in the analysis of negative affect and depression symptoms, while distinct trajectory classes of worsening, improving/stable, and upright u-shaped also emerged for analyses of positive affect and life satisfaction shaped. |
2024-08-27 |
2024-08-30 |
human |
Philip E Mosley, Johan N van der Meer, Lachlan H W Hamilton, Jurgen Fripp, Stephen Parker, Jayson Jeganathan, Michael Breakspear, Richard Parker, Rebecca Holland, Brittany L Mitchell, Enda Byrne, Ian B Hickie, Sarah E Medland, Nicholas G Martin, Luca Cocch. Markers of positive affect and brain state synchrony discriminate melancholic from non-melancholic depression using naturalistic stimuli. Molecular psychiatry. 2024-08-27. PMID:39191867. |
markers of positive affect and brain state synchrony discriminate melancholic from non-melancholic depression using naturalistic stimuli. |
2024-08-27 |
2024-08-30 |
human |
Philip E Mosley, Johan N van der Meer, Lachlan H W Hamilton, Jurgen Fripp, Stephen Parker, Jayson Jeganathan, Michael Breakspear, Richard Parker, Rebecca Holland, Brittany L Mitchell, Enda Byrne, Ian B Hickie, Sarah E Medland, Nicholas G Martin, Luca Cocch. Markers of positive affect and brain state synchrony discriminate melancholic from non-melancholic depression using naturalistic stimuli. Molecular psychiatry. 2024-08-27. PMID:39191867. |
our multimodal findings show differences in evaluative and motoric domains between melancholic and non-melancholic depression through engagement in ecologically valid tasks that evoke positive emotion. |
2024-08-27 |
2024-08-30 |
human |
Marleska Zambrano-Camiña, Selene Valero-Moreno, Marián Pérez-Marí. MIDITRA Protocol: Psychological Intervention in Adults with Difficult-to-Treat Migraine: An Open Study. Alternative therapies in health and medicine. vol 30. issue 5. 2024-07-30. PMID:38819188. |
the analysis will focus on the therapeutic benefits of applying the miditra protocol, specifically aiming to reduce migraine-related disability, diminish the negative impact of headaches, enhance the quality of life, mitigate pain catastrophizing, increase life satisfaction, elevate positive affect, decrease negative affect, lower psychological stress, boost resilience, and reduce anxiety and depression. |
2024-07-30 |
2024-08-02 |
human |
Lisa-Marie Hartnagel, Ulrich W Ebner-Priemer, Jerome C Foo, Fabian Streit, Stephanie H Witt, Josef Frank, Matthias F Limberger, Andrea B Horn, Maria Gilles, Marcella Rietschel, Lea Sirignan. Linguistic style as a digital marker for depression severity: An ambulatory assessment pilot study in patients with depressive disorder undergoing sleep deprivation therapy. Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica. 2024-07-11. PMID:38987940. |
especially, linguistic style has been seen as a potential behavioral marker of depression, as cross-sectional studies showed, for example, less frequent use of positive emotion words, intensified use of negative emotion words, and more self-references in patients with depression compared to healthy controls. |
2024-07-11 |
2024-07-13 |
Not clear |
Xiangling Hou, Tianqiang Hu, Haoran Li, Sam Henry, Shengtao Ren, Juzhe Xi, René Mõttu. Construct Validity, Longitudinal Measurement Invariance, Incremental Validity, and Predictive Validity of the Original Grit Scale in Chinese Young Adults. Journal of personality assessment. 2024-07-03. PMID:38959132. |
grit and its two facets longitudinally predicted subjective well-being (i.e., life satisfaction, happiness, positive affect, negative affect, and depression) but had negligible incremental validity for two semesters' grades after controlling for conscientiousness. |
2024-07-03 |
2024-07-10 |
Not clear |
Ruba Rum, Jessica A Birg, Gabriella Silva, Jonathan Rottenberg, Peter E Clayson, Fallon R Goodma. Social Motivation Differentiates Social Anxiety and Depression: A Daily Diary Study. Behavior therapy. vol 55. issue 4. 2024-06-27. PMID:38937044. |
in this daily diary study, we sought to understand the interplay between daily social anxiety and depression symptoms and emotion and motivation, determining whether daily symptoms are independently linked with positive affect, negative affect, and social motivation (desire to approach or to withdraw from others). |
2024-06-27 |
2024-06-30 |
Not clear |
Ruba Rum, Jessica A Birg, Gabriella Silva, Jonathan Rottenberg, Peter E Clayson, Fallon R Goodma. Social Motivation Differentiates Social Anxiety and Depression: A Daily Diary Study. Behavior therapy. vol 55. issue 4. 2024-06-27. PMID:38937044. |
within-person analyses found that increases in social anxiety and depression symptoms were uniquely associated with elevated negative affect; only increases in depression symptoms were associated with diminished positive affect. |
2024-06-27 |
2024-06-30 |
Not clear |
Luke A Egan, Haeme R P Park, Janine Lam, Justine M Gat. Resilience to Stress and Adversity: A Narrative Review of the Role of Positive Affect. Psychology research and behavior management. vol 17. 2024-05-21. PMID:38770188. |
with positive affect as a resilience resource, the literature suggests that higher levels of positive affect may protect individuals from the impact of stress on a number of outcomes, such as depression and trauma symptoms. |
2024-05-21 |
2024-05-27 |
Not clear |
Gabriella Spiegler, Yingying Su, Muzi Li, Christina Wolfson, Xiangfei Meng, Norbert Schmit. Characterization of depression subtypes and their relationships to stressor profiles among middle-aged and older adults: An analysis of the canadian longitudinal study on aging (CLSA). Journal of psychiatric research. vol 175. 2024-05-18. PMID:38761515. |
four depression subtypes were identified: positive affect, melancholic, typical, and atypical. |
2024-05-18 |
2024-05-27 |
human |
Lauren E Jackson, Kayla A Wilson, Annmarie MacNamar. Savoring mental imagery: Electrocortical effects and association with depression. Behaviour research and therapy. vol 179. 2024-05-18. PMID:38761557. |
results are in line with recent work that has shown the benefits of positive affect treatment for depression, to suggest that deficits in savoring mental imagery may play a role in the development and/or maintenance of depression. |
2024-05-18 |
2024-05-27 |
human |
Maria Kryza-Lacombe, Isabella Spaulding, Cheuk King Ku, Nana Pearson, Murray B Stein, Charles T Taylo. Amplification of positivity for depression and anxiety: Neural prediction of treatment response. Behaviour research and therapy. vol 178. 2024-05-07. PMID:38714105. |
psychosocial treatments targeting the positive valence system (pvs) in depression and anxiety demonstrate efficacy in enhancing positive affect (pa), but response to treatment varies. |
2024-05-07 |
2024-05-27 |
human |