Positively reinterpreting negative experiences is important for psychological well-being and represents a key mechanism of cognitive–behavioral therapies for emotional problems. Yet, little is known about the neural mechanisms that underlie this process and how they relate to clinically relevant individual differences. Here we demonstrate using event-related potentials (ERPs) that positively reappraising distress-inducing images is associated with early increases in frontal control activity and later decreases in parietal arousal-related activity. Moreover, we show that people’s chronic tendencies to reappraise versus worry modulate neural activity in opposing directions—trait reappraisal predicts decreases in parietal arousal-related activ...
The regulation of negative emotion through reappraisal has been shown to induce increased prefrontal...
Abstract Neuroimaging research has identified systems that facilitate minimizing negativ...
Emotion regulation (ER) is crucial in terms of mental health and social functioning. Attention deplo...
Positively reinterpreting negative experiences is important for psychological well-being and represe...
Previous studies have reported that individual differences in reappraisal use are associated with pa...
AbstractCognitive emotion regulation strategies, such as reappraising the emotional meaning of event...
The ability to exert control over emotions, termed emotion regulation (ER), is vital for everyday fu...
Reappraisal is a well-known emotion regulation strategy. Recent neuroimaging studies suggest that re...
This study investigated the neural basis of individual variation in emotion regulation, specifically...
To examine whether reappraisal modifies responses to subsequent encounters with stimuli, participant...
Reappraisal is a well-known emotion regulation strategy. Recent neuroimaging studies suggest that re...
Emotion regulation plays a crucial role in an individual’s well-being, as it is known that deficits ...
The neural substrate of cognitive reappraisal has been well-mapped. Individuals who successfully dow...
& The ability to cognitively regulate emotional responses to aversive events is important for me...
During cognitive reappraisal, an individual reinterprets the meaning of an emotional stimulus to reg...
The regulation of negative emotion through reappraisal has been shown to induce increased prefrontal...
Abstract Neuroimaging research has identified systems that facilitate minimizing negativ...
Emotion regulation (ER) is crucial in terms of mental health and social functioning. Attention deplo...
Positively reinterpreting negative experiences is important for psychological well-being and represe...
Previous studies have reported that individual differences in reappraisal use are associated with pa...
AbstractCognitive emotion regulation strategies, such as reappraising the emotional meaning of event...
The ability to exert control over emotions, termed emotion regulation (ER), is vital for everyday fu...
Reappraisal is a well-known emotion regulation strategy. Recent neuroimaging studies suggest that re...
This study investigated the neural basis of individual variation in emotion regulation, specifically...
To examine whether reappraisal modifies responses to subsequent encounters with stimuli, participant...
Reappraisal is a well-known emotion regulation strategy. Recent neuroimaging studies suggest that re...
Emotion regulation plays a crucial role in an individual’s well-being, as it is known that deficits ...
The neural substrate of cognitive reappraisal has been well-mapped. Individuals who successfully dow...
& The ability to cognitively regulate emotional responses to aversive events is important for me...
During cognitive reappraisal, an individual reinterprets the meaning of an emotional stimulus to reg...
The regulation of negative emotion through reappraisal has been shown to induce increased prefrontal...
Abstract Neuroimaging research has identified systems that facilitate minimizing negativ...
Emotion regulation (ER) is crucial in terms of mental health and social functioning. Attention deplo...