20 research outputs found

    Érzelemszabályozás – a megküzdés és az érzelmi intelligencia tükrében: Három független, de mégis átfedő elméleti és kutatási tradíció = Emotion Regulation – In the Context of Coping and Emotional Intelligence Literature: Three Distinct Yet Overlapping Theoretical and Empirical Traditions

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    A megfelelően kezelt és szabályozott érzelmi folyamatok kulcsfontosságú szerepet töltenek be a környezeti kihívásokhoz való sikeres alkalmazkodásban, és biztosítják az optimális mindennapi funkcionálást. Ennek alapján fontos megállapítani, hogy milyen helyzetekben és módokon, mely stratégiákon keresztül, valamint milyen képességek és készségek birtokában tudjuk hatékonyan kezelni érzelmeinket. Jelen elméleti összefoglaló fő célja, hogy az érzelemszabályozás folyamatmodelljének szemüvegén át vizsgálja az érzelemszabályozás, a megküzdés és az érzelmi intelligencia összefüggéseit és különbségeit. A teoretikus modellek felsorolásán kívül kézzelfogható példákon keresztül mutatjuk be a különböző folyamatokat és stratégiákat, és kitérünk az adaptivitás, maladaptivitás, valamint a pozitív érzelemszabályozás kérdéskörére is. Összefoglalónkat néhány kurrens kutatás empirikus eredményével zárjuk, és kiemeljük az ökológiai validitás fontosságának kérdéskörét az érzelemszabályozási kutatásokban. Properly managed emotional processes have crucial role in the adaptation to environmental demands and in the maintenance of optimal everyday functioning. For this reason, it is important to determine those met-hods, situations, strategies, abilities or skills by which a person could effectively manage his/her emotions. The aim of this theoretical paper is to investigate the associations and differences of emotional regulation with coping and emotional intelligence literature from the perspective of the Process Model of Emotion Regu-lation. Beyond the description of the theoretical models, we demonstrate the different processes and strategies through concrete examples; and we deal with the issues of adaptive-maladaptive emotion regulation and positive emotion regulation. Finally, we cite some current empirical results and highlight the importance of ecological validity in emotion regulation research

    Nonproductive thoughts, somatic symptoms and well-being in adolescence: testing the moderator role of age and gender in a representative study

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    BACKGROUND: Previous findings suggest a female preponderance in nonproductive thoughts -rumination and worry-, but studies on gender differences in the strength of the relationship between nonproductive thoughts, somatic symptoms and subjective well-being are scarce. Our aim was to test whether gender and age would moderate these associations. METHODS: 1572 adolescents were involved in this representative cross-sectional study (770 boys; mean age = 15.39; SD = 2.26 years). Nonproductive thoughts were measured by Nonproductive Thoughts Questionnaire for Children (NPTQ-C), somatic symptoms were assessed by Somatic Complaint List (SCL), while Mental Health Continuum-Short Form (MHC-SF) was used to measure subjective well-being. To assess the moderation effects of age and gender on the relationship between nonproductive thoughts, somatic symptoms and well-being, four multiple indicator multiple causes (MIMIC) models were defined. RESULTS: Our results suggested that higher rates of nonproductive thoughts predicted a higher level of somatic symptoms and a lower level of subjective well-being. The analyses revealed that although nonproductive thoughts were strongly and equally associated with somatic symptoms among boys and girls, age was a significant moderator. Gender also moderated the relationship between nonproductive thoughts and subjective well-being. CONCLUSIONS: Our results support the importance of nonproductive thoughts in somatic symptoms and highlight that the strength of the relationship is similar across both genders but could be dependent upon age. The findings also shed light on the decreased well-being of girls, especially with elevated level of nonproductive thoughts

    Association between migraine frequency and neural response to emotional faces: An fMRI study

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    Previous studies have demonstrated that migraine is associated with enhanced perception and altered cerebralprocessing of sensory stimuli. More recently, it has been suggested that this sensory hypersensitivity mightreflect a more general enhanced response to aversive emotional stimuli. Using functional magnetic resonanceimaging and emotional face stimuli (fearful, happy and sad faces), we compared whole-brain activation between41 migraine patients without aura in interictal period and 49 healthy controls. Migraine patients showed in-creased neural activation to fearful faces compared to neutral faces in the right middle frontal gyrus and frontalpole relative to healthy controls. We also found that higher attack frequency in migraine patients was related toincreased activation mainly in the right primary somatosensory cortex (corresponding to the face area) to fearfulexpressions and in the right dorsal striatal regions to happy faces. In both analyses, activation differences re-mained significant after controlling for anxiety and depressive symptoms. Thesefindings indicate that enhancedresponse to emotional stimuli might explain the migraine trigger effect of psychosocial stressors that graduallyleads to increased somatosensory response to emotional clues and thus contributes to the progression orchronification of migrain

    A Cross-Sectional Study on the Quality of Life in Migraine and Medication Overuse Headache in a Hungarian Sample: Understanding the Effect of Headache Characteristics

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    Háttér és célkitûzés – Általános és betegségspecifikus életminőség-kérdőívet használó vizsgálatok eredményei alapján mind migrénben, mind fájdalomcsillapító-túlfogyasztáshoz társuló fejfájásban (FTTF) szenvedő betegek esetében alacsonyabb életminôség-értékeket mértek a kontrollrésztvevőkhöz hasonlítva. Vizsgálatunk célja egyrészt a migrénben és FTTF-ben szenvedő betegek életminőségének, valamint a fejfájás-karakterisztika (fejfájós évek száma, auratünetek, triptánhasználat, fejfájássúlyosság és fejfájás-gyakoriság) életminőségre gyakorolt hatásának vizsgálata volt. Módszerek – Keresztmetszeti vizsgálatunkban 334 beteg vett részt (248 beteg fejfájás-ambulanciánkról, valamint 86 beteg hirdetés útján). A résztvevők életminőségének értékeléséhez az Átfogó Fejfájással Kapcsolatos Életminőség kérdőívet (CHQQ) használtuk. Adataink normáleloszlást mutattak, így χ2-próba mellett parametrikus teszte ket alkalmaztunk (például független mintás t-próba), a szignifikanciaszintet p < 0,05-ban határoztuk meg. A nem, életkor, beválogatási kritériumok, fejfájástípus, valamint fejfájás-karakterisztika (auratünetek megléte, fejfájós évek száma, fejfájás súlyossága, fejfájás gyakorisága, triptánhasználat) életminőségre gyakorolt hatásának vizsgálatához lineáris regressziós modelleket használtunk mind a három CHQQ-alskála és az összpontszám tekintetében is. Az utóbbi esetében az I. típusú hiba elkerülésének érdekében a szignifikanciaszintet p<=0,0125 (0,05/4) értékben határoztuk meg. Eredmények – A fejfájástípust önmagában vizsgálva az FTTF-ben szenvedő betegek a szociális alskála kivételével szignifikánsan alacsonyabb CHQQ-értékeket értek el, mint a migrénes betegek. A többi változó bevonásával elvégzett regressziós elemzések alapján a triptánhasználat mutatott fordított összefüggést az összes CHQQ-alskálaértékkel (p < 0,0125). A vizsgált fejfájás-karakterisztikák közül a fejfájás súlyossága mutatott szignifikáns kapcsolatot az alacsonyabb fizikaialskála-értékekkel (p = 0,001), valamint az alacsonyabb CHQQ-összpontszámmal (p = 0,002). Következtetés – Eredményeink azt mutatják, hogy a fejfájás-karakterisztika (és nem a fejfájás típusa önmagában) összefüggést mutat a fejfájós betegek alacsonyabb életminôségével. Az életminőség-változást előidézô faktorok meghatározása fontos a különböző betegpopulációk adekvát kezelésének, valamint az egészségügyi szolgáltatások igénybevételével és az egészségügyi költségekkel kapcsolatos népegészségügyi intézkedéseknek a megtervezése érdekében

    Altered neural activity to monetary reward/loss processing in episodic migraine

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    The dysfunctions of the mesolimbic cortical reward circuit have been proposed to contribute to migraine pain. Although supporting empirical evidence was mainly found in connection with primary rewards or in chronic migraine where the pain experience is (almost) constant. Our goal however was to investigate the neural correlates of secondary reward/loss anticipation and consumption using the monetary incentive delay task in 29 episodic migraine patients and 41 headache-free controls. Migraine patients showed decreased activation in one cluster covering the right inferior frontal gyrus during reward consumption compared to controls. We also found significant negative correlation between the time of the last migraine attack before the scan and activation of the parahippocampal gyrus and the right hippocampus yielded to loss anticipation. During reward/loss consumption, a relative increase in the activity of the visual areas was observed the more time passed between the last attack and the scan session. Our results suggest intact reward/loss anticipation but altered reward consumption in migraine, indicating a decreased reactivity to monetary rewards. The findings also raise the possibility that neural responses to loss anticipation and reward/loss consumption could be altered by the proximity of the last migraine attack not just during pre-ictal periods, but interictally as well

    Trait Rumination Influences Neural Correlates of the Anticipation but Not the Consumption Phase of Reward Processing

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    Cumulative evidence suggests that trait rumination can be defined as an abstract information processing mode, which leads people to constantly anticipate the likely impact of present events on future events and experiences. A previous study with remitted depressed patients suggested that enhanced rumination tendencies distort brain mechanisms of anticipatory processes associated with reward and loss cues. In the present study, we explored the impact of trait rumination on neural activity during reward and loss anticipation among never-depressed people. We analyzed the data of 37 healthy controls, who performed the monetary incentive delay (MID) task which was designed for the simultaneous measurement of the anticipation (motivational) and consumption (hedonic) phase of reward processing, during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Our results show that rumination-after controlling for age, gender, and current mood-significantly influenced neural responses to reward (win) cues compared to loss cues. Blood-oxygenation-level-dependent (BOLD) activity in the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) triangularis, left anterior insula, and left rolandic operculum was positively related to Ruminative Response Scale (RRS) scores. We did not detect any significant rumination-related activations associated with win-neutral or loss-neutral cues and with reward or loss consumption. Our results highlight the influence of trait rumination on reward anticipation in a non-depressed sample. They also suggest that for never-depressed ruminators rewarding cues are more salient than loss cues. BOLD response during reward consumption did not relate to rumination, suggesting that rumination mainly relates to processing of the motivational (wanting) aspect of reward rather than the hedonic (liking) aspect, at least in the absence of pathological mood

    Tears evoke the intention to offer social support: A systematic investigation of the interpersonal effects of emotional crying across 41 countries

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    Tearful crying is a ubiquitous and likely uniquely human phenomenon. Scholars have argued that emotional tears serve an attachment function: Tears are thought to act as a social glue by evoking social support intentions. Initial experimental studies supported this proposition across several methodologies, but these were conducted almost exclusively on participants from North America and Europe, resulting in limited generalizability. This project examined the tears-social support intentions effect and possible mediating and moderating variables in a fully pre-registered study across 7007 participants (24,886 ratings) and 41 countries spanning all populated continents. Participants were presented with four pictures out of 100 possible targets with or without digitally-added tears. We confirmed the main prediction that seeing a tearful individual elicits the intention to support, d = 0.49 [0.43, 0.55]. Our data suggest that this effect could be mediated by perceiving the crying target as warmer and more helpless, feeling more connected, as well as feeling more empathic concern for the crier, but not by an increase in personal distress of the observer. The effect was moderated by the situational valence, identifying the target as part of one's group, and trait empathic concern. A neutral situation, high trait empathic concern, and low identification increased the effect. We observed high heterogeneity across countries that was, via split-half validation, best explained by country-level GDP per capita and subjective well-being with stronger effects for higher-scoring countries. These findings suggest that tears can function as social glue, providing one possible explanation why emotional crying persists into adulthood.</p
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