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UID:DSC-13892
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20180104T170000
SEQUENCE:1512994033
TRANSP:OPAQUE
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20180104T180000
URL:https://dresden-science-calendar.de/calendar/en/detail/13892
LOCATION:TUD Falkenbrunnen\,  01187 Dresden
SUMMARY:Wang: Accept or Change? An Induced \"Experiential Acceptance\" Vers
 us a \"Cognitive Emotion Regulation\" in emotional processing
CLASS:PUBLIC
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Yulin Wang\nInstitute of Speaker: Vrije Universiteit B
 russel\nTopics:\nMedizin\, Psychologie\n Location:\n  Name: TUD Falkenbrun
 nen (FAL 156\, Chemnitzer Str. 46b)\n  Street:  \n  City: 01187 Dresden\n 
  Phone: \n  Fax: \nDescription: Adaptive emotion regulation (ER) is conduc
 ive to physical and mental health\, whereas dysfunctional ER is central to
  psychopathology. Emotion can be regulated with 'experiential ER'\, which 
 refers to the affectively attending\, acknowledging and getting awareness 
 of the bodily felt feeling in an accepting and welcoming way. Also\, emoti
 on can be regulated with 'cognitive reappraisal' by which reinterpretation
 s of a situation can change one’s emotions about it. To address the effe
 ctiveness of these two ER strategies\, a series of experiments has been co
 nducted in our lab. Study 1 compared both experiential ER and reappraisal 
 relative to a neutral ER baseline and its impact on sleep physiology in 43
  healthy participants. Stress was triggered with an emotional failure indu
 ction\, after which ER was induced twice. The use of reappraisal resulted 
 in more fragmented and restless sleep when compared to experiential ER or 
 neutral baseline. Study 2 further compared experiential ER and reappraisal
  based on their repeated usage in 69 healthy female participants using phy
 siological measurements. Compared to watch negative condition\, the skin c
 onductance response was decreased by experiential ER in the third time (p=
 0.017) while the zygomatic activity (p=0.012) and respiration amplitude (p
 =0.016) were increased by reappraisal in the third time. Our results sugge
 sted experiential ER works effectively in decreasing the arousing level of
  emotions while cognitive reappraisal works effectively in producing posit
 ive feelings. Study 3 further compared the repeated effects of experientia
 l ER to cognitive reappraisal in the brain in 35 female participants while
  their respiration and heart rate were recorded simultaneously during the 
 fMRI scanning. The aim of the data analysis is to disentangle the body-bra
 in relationship representing these two ways of regulating emotions by usin
 g the physiological data as parametric modulator vector corresponding to t
 he onset time of each experimental conditions. In this way\, we hope to id
 entify the covariant regions in the fMRI signal with the single-trial phys
 iological measure. A challenge is to extract the single-trial physiologica
 l measures\, which we would like to have your suggestions. In addition\, i
 t would be interesting to discuss other options of analyzing the fMRI data
  to have higher sensitivity to detect the neural mechanisms involved in th
 ese two ways of regulating emotions.
DTSTAMP:20260430T143556Z
CREATED:20171211T120543Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171211T120713Z
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