Reappraisal inventiveness: impact of appropriate brain activation during efforts to generate alternative appraisals on the perception of chronic stress in women.
Corinna M PerchtoldAndreas FinkChristian RomingerHannelore WeberVera Loureiro de AssunçãoGünter SchulterElisabeth M WeissIlona PapousekPublished in: Anxiety, stress, and coping (2018)
These findings underline the practical relevance of individual differences in appropriate brain activation during emotion regulation efforts and the assumedly related basic capacity for the generation of cognitive reappraisals to the feeling of being stressed. Implications include the selection of interventions for the improvement of coping with stress in women in whom the capability for appropriate brain activation during reappraisal efforts may be impaired, e.g., due to depression or old age.
Keyphrases
- resting state
- white matter
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- depressive symptoms
- functional connectivity
- quality improvement
- cerebral ischemia
- physical activity
- type diabetes
- stress induced
- social support
- breast cancer risk
- metabolic syndrome
- cervical cancer screening
- blood brain barrier
- adipose tissue
- brain injury
- heat stress
- insulin resistance
- drug induced