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@ARTICLE{Radke:837514,
author = {Radke, Sina and Hoffstaedter, Felix and Löffler, Leonie
and Kogler, Lydia and Schneider, Frank and Blechert, Jens
and Derntl, Birgit},
title = {{I}maging the up’s and down’s of emotion regulation in
lifetime depression},
journal = {Brain imaging and behavior},
volume = {12},
number = {1},
issn = {1931-7565},
address = {New York, NY [u.a.]},
publisher = {Springer},
reportid = {FZJ-2017-06410},
pages = {156–167},
year = {2018},
abstract = {Reappraisal is a particularly effective strategy for
influencing emotional experiences, specifically for reducing
the impact of negative stimuli. Although depression has
repeatedly been linked to dysfunctional behavioral and
neural emotion regulation, prefrontal and amygdala
engagement seems to vary with clinical characteristics and
the specific regulation strategy used. Whereas previous
neuroimaging research has focused on down-regulating
reactions to emotionally evocative scenes, the current study
compared up- and down-regulation in response to angry facial
expressions in patients with depression and healthy
individuals. During the initial viewing of faces, patients
with depression showed hypoactivation particularly in areas
implicated in emotion generation, i.e., amygdala, insula and
putamen. In contrast, up-regulating negative emotions
yielded stronger recruitment of core face processing areas
and posterior medial frontal cortex in patients than in
controls. However, group differences did not extend to
resting-state functional connectivity. Recurrent depression
was inversely associated with amygdala activation
specifically during down-regulation, but differences in
medication status may limit the current findings. Despite a
pattern of reduced neural emotional reactivity in mainly
medicated patients, their ‘successful’ recruitment of
the regulation network for up-regulation might point toward
an effective use of reappraisal when increasing negative
emotions. Future studies need to address how patients might
benefit from transferring this ability to adaptive goals,
such as improving interpersonal emotion regulation.},
cin = {INM-1 / INM-7 / INM-10},
ddc = {150},
cid = {I:(DE-Juel1)INM-1-20090406 / I:(DE-Juel1)INM-7-20090406 /
I:(DE-Juel1)INM-10-20170113},
pnm = {571 - Connectivity and Activity (POF3-571)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF3-571},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
pubmed = {pmid:28197859},
UT = {WOS:000425307500014},
doi = {10.1007/s11682-017-9682-2},
url = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/837514},
}