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Showing 1 to 15 of 24 results Save | Export
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Abaied, Jamie L.; Stanger, Sarah B.; Wagner, Caitlin; Sanders, Wesley; Dyer, W. Justin; Padilla-Walker, Laura – Developmental Psychology, 2018
A burgeoning literature supports the role of autonomic nervous system (ANS) functioning as an index of physiologic sensitivity to the environment, but extant research is limited in its focus on single branches of the ANS, childhood samples, and solely negative environmental factors. This study seeks to address these limitations by exploring…
Descriptors: Physiology, Psychophysiology, Mothers, Emotional Adjustment
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Bernard, Kristin; Kuzava, Sierra; Simons, Robert; Dozier, Mary – Developmental Psychology, 2018
Maltreating mothers often struggle to respond sensitively to their children's distress. Examining psychophysiological processing of own child cues may offer insight into neurobiological mechanisms that promote sensitive parenting among high-risk mothers. The current study used event-related potential (ERP) methodology to examine associations…
Descriptors: Mothers, Parent Child Relationship, Emotional Disturbances, Biochemistry
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Borelli, Jessica L.; Sbarra, David A.; Crowley, Michael J.; Mayes, Linda C. – Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 2011
Clinical accounts of depression underscore its relation to negative emotional experiences; yet few empirical studies examine emotional experiences in adults with depression, with even less work on depression and emotion in children. Using a nonclinical sample of school-aged children (n = 89) ages 8 to 12, this study evaluated whether greater mood…
Descriptors: Models, Emotional Response, Adults, Psychophysiology
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Torpey, Dana C.; Hajcak, Greg; Kim, Jiyon; Kujawa, Autumn J.; Dyson, Margaret W.; Olino, Thomas M.; Klein, Daniel N. – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2013
Background: There is increasing interest in error-related brain activity in anxiety disorders. The error-related negativity (ERN) is a negative deflection in the event-related potential approximately 50 [milliseconds] after errors compared to correct responses. Recent studies suggest that the ERN may be a biomarker for anxiety, as it is positively…
Descriptors: Brain, Anxiety Disorders, Personality Traits, Emotional Response
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Forbes, Erika E.; Shaw, Daniel S.; Silk, Jennifer S.; Feng, Xin; Cohn, Jeffrey F.; Fox, Nathan A.; Kovacs, Maria – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2008
Although parents and children are thought to influence one another's affect and behavior, few studies have examined the direction of effects from children to parents, particularly with respect to parental psychopathology. We tested the hypothesis that children's affective characteristics are associated with the course of mothers' depressive…
Descriptors: Mothers, Psychopathology, Psychophysiology, Affective Behavior
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Kjellgren, Anette; Lyden, Francisca; Norlander, Torsten – Qualitative Report, 2008
A qualitative analysis (The Empirical Phenomenological Psychological method) of interviews involving eight patients (depression, burn-out syndrome, and chronic pain) was carried out in order to obtain knowledge regarding the effects of flotation tank therapy. This knowledge might be helpful for both professionals and potential floaters. The…
Descriptors: Pain, Patients, Depression (Psychology), Qualitative Research
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Weise, Cornelia; Heinecke, Kristin; Rief, Winfried – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2008
Many tinnitus sufferers believe that their tinnitus has an organic basis and thus seek medical rather than psychological treatments. Tinnitus has been found to be associated with negative appraisal, dysfunctional attention shift, and heightened psychophysiological arousal, so cognitive-behavioral interventions and biofeedback are commonly…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Intervention, Behavior Modification, Patients
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Roy, Alex – Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 1994
Reviews studies on suicidal behavior in depressed patients, including study showing that depressed patients who had attempted suicide had significantly reduced CSF concentrations of dopamine metabolite homovanillic acid (HVA) and significantly lower urinary outputs of HVA than patients who had not attempted suicide. Considers role of diminished…
Descriptors: Clinical Diagnosis, Depression (Psychology), Identification, Physiology
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Kaplan, Barbara J. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 1986
Argues that depression may be viewed as one of several normal affective developments of pregnancy rooted in some of the physiological events of gestation and that identification of depression during pregnancy may be difficult (but nonetheless important) because the symptoms of pregnancy and depression are confounded. (Author/ABB)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Depression (Psychology), Females, Physiology
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Richards, Paul M.; Ruff, Ronald M. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1989
Used various measures to examine neuropsychology of depression in terms of organic and motivational hypotheses among 30 medication-free depressed outpatients and 30 nondepressed controls. A 2 x 2 (diagnosis x motivational level) multivariate analysis revealed significant main effect for depression, but no effect for motivation and no interaction.…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Depression (Psychology), Motivation, Multivariate Analysis
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Otto, Michael W.; Leyro, Teresa M.; Christian, Kelly; Deveney, Christen M.; Reese, Hannah; Pollack, Mark H.; Orr, Scott P. – Behavior Modification, 2007
Studies using fear-conditioning paradigms have found that anxiety patients are more conditionable than individuals without these disorders, but these effects have been demonstrated inconsistently. It is unclear whether these findings have etiological significance or whether enhanced conditionability is linked only to certain anxiety…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Individual Characteristics, Depression (Psychology), Psychological Patterns
Lobel, Brana; Hirschfeld, Robert M. A. – 1984
This booklet is concerned with the area of clinical depression. Questions about clinical depression are briefly answered in an overview section and are examined in greater detail in the five chapters that follow. In chapter 1, depression is defined and various types of depression are identified. The origins of depression are explored in the second…
Descriptors: Children, Clinical Diagnosis, Depression (Psychology), Drug Therapy
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Small, Arnold; And Others – Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1983
Studied whether somatic content is more important than self-devaluation in producing depressive mood variations, using the Veltan Mood Induction Procedure on college students (N=302). Results indicated that students in the self-devaluation condition showed significantly more depressed affect than students in the neutral condition. (WAS)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, College Students, Depression (Psychology), Emotional Response
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Bennett, Jeanine; And Others – Physical Educator, 1982
A study into the effects of physical exercise on levels of depression in older adults showed that greater physical activity is a factor in improving emotional and physical well-being. Findings indicate that there is significant improvement in the emotional states of those older individuals who participated in the physical exercise program. (JN)
Descriptors: Depression (Psychology), Educational Research, Exercise Physiology, Helplessness
Beaty, Lee A. – 1996
The process of relaxation is a complex triarchic phenomenon that incorporates behavioral, cognitive, and physiological components. Existing literature is surveyed in order to determine the efficacy of treating various forms of depression with cognitive-behavioral relaxation strategies. Relaxation training has been shown to be effective in treating…
Descriptors: Cognitive Restructuring, Depression (Psychology), Emotional Disturbances, Medical Care Evaluation
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