All Relations between Depression and positive emotion

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Dale A Lund, Rebecca Utz, Michael S Caserta, Brian De Vrie. Humor, laughter, and happiness in the daily lives of recently bereaved spouses. Omega. vol 58. issue 2. 2009-03-20. PMID:19227000. experiencing humor, laughter, and happiness was strongly associated with favorable bereavement adjustments (lower grief and depression) regardless of the extent to which the bereaved person valued having these positive emotions. 2009-03-20 2023-08-12 Not clear
Diane Strachowski, Anna Khaylis, Ansgar Conrad, Eric Neri, David Spiegel, C Barr Taylo. The effects of cognitive behavior therapy on depression in older patients with cardiovascular risk. Depression and anxiety. vol 25. issue 8. 2009-03-17. PMID:17377961. cbt is an effective treatment for reducing depression and increasing positive affect in patients at risk for cvd, but the results vary by time of measurement and measurement setting. 2009-03-17 2023-08-12 human
Dennis E McChargue, Neal Dora. Cue-evoked positive affect, depression vulnerability and smoking years. American journal of health behavior. vol 33. issue 1. 2009-02-25. PMID:18844520. cue-evoked positive affect, depression vulnerability and smoking years. 2009-02-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
Laura M Philipp, Christi Washington, Mona Raouf, Peter J Norto. Cross-cultural examination of the tripartite model in adults. Cognitive behaviour therapy. vol 37. issue 4. 2009-02-20. PMID:18759192. the tripartite model proposes that the overlap and distinction between anxiety and depression can be best understood along three dimensions: positive affect, negative affect, and physiological hyperarousal. 2009-02-20 2023-08-12 Not clear
Brent T Mausbach, David W Coon, Thomas L Patterson, Igor Gran. Engagement in activities is associated with affective arousal in Alzheimer's caregivers: a preliminary examination of the temporal relations between activity and affect. Behavior therapy. vol 39. issue 4. 2009-02-03. PMID:19027433. these results may help further develop behavioral models of depression by suggesting that behavioral or self-reinforcing activities are associated primarily (or more saliently) with one's experience of positive affect. 2009-02-03 2023-08-12 Not clear
Bruce W Smith, Alex J Zautr. The effects of anxiety and depression on weekly pain in women with arthritis. Pain. vol 138. issue 2. 2009-01-26. PMID:18289792. in addition, both anxiety and depression were indirectly related to current pain through negative and positive affect and depression interacted with stress to predict current pain in the ra group. 2009-01-26 2023-08-12 Not clear
Bruce W Smith, Alex J Zautr. The effects of anxiety and depression on weekly pain in women with arthritis. Pain. vol 138. issue 2. 2009-01-26. PMID:18289792. in addition, anxiety alone was indirectly related to current pain through negative affect and depression alone was indirectly related to current pain through positive affect. 2009-01-26 2023-08-12 Not clear
T Archer, B Adolfsson, E Karlsso. Affective personality as cognitive-emotional presymptom profiles regulatory for self-reported health predispositions. Neurotoxicity research. vol 14. issue 1. 2009-01-13. PMID:18790723. three studies that examined the links between affective personality, as constructed from responses to the positive affect (pa) and negative affect (na) scale (panas), and individuals' self-report of self-esteem, intrinsic motivation and beck's depression inventory (bdi) depression in high school students and persons in working occupations are described. 2009-01-13 2023-08-12 Not clear
P Todd Korthuis, Laurie C Zephyrin, John A Fleishman, Somnath Saha, Joshua S Josephs, Moriah M McGrath, James Hellinger, Kelly A Geb. Health-related quality of life in HIV-infected patients: the role of substance use. AIDS patient care and STDs. vol 22. issue 11. 2008-12-30. PMID:19025480. hrqol was assessed by multi-item measures of physical and role functioning, general health, pain, energy, positive affect, anxiety, and depression. 2008-12-30 2023-08-12 human
Martin Sellbom, Yossef S Ben-Porath, R Michael Bagb. On the hierarchical structure of mood and anxiety disorders: confirmatory evidence and elaboration of a model of temperament markers. Journal of abnormal psychology. vol 117. issue 3. 2008-10-21. PMID:18729610. low positive emotions was a specific marker of depression and social phobia. 2008-10-21 2023-08-12 Not clear
Catherine E Ross, John Mirowsk. Age and the balance of emotions. Social science & medicine (1982). vol 66. issue 12. 2008-10-08. PMID:18339465. we should see a shift in positive emotions from active (excitement) to passive (serenity), as well as in the negative emotions (from the agitation of anxiety and anger to the lethargy of depression). 2008-10-08 2023-08-12 Not clear
Stacey L Hart, Lea Vella, David C Moh. Relationships among depressive symptoms, benefit-finding, optimism, and positive affect in multiple sclerosis patients after psychotherapy for depression. Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association. vol 27. issue 2. 2008-08-22. PMID:18377142. relationships among depressive symptoms, benefit-finding, optimism, and positive affect in multiple sclerosis patients after psychotherapy for depression. 2008-08-22 2023-08-12 Not clear
Stacey L Hart, Lea Vella, David C Moh. Relationships among depressive symptoms, benefit-finding, optimism, and positive affect in multiple sclerosis patients after psychotherapy for depression. Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association. vol 27. issue 2. 2008-08-22. PMID:18377142. using the broaden-and-build model of positive emotions (fredrickson, 2001) and the expectancy-value model of optimism (carver & scheier, 1998) as two related, yet, distinct conceptual frameworks, this study examined positive affect and optimism as mediators of the relationship between improved depression and enhanced benefit-finding. 2008-08-22 2023-08-12 Not clear
Alex J Zautra, Mary C Davis, John W Reich, Perry Nicassario, Howard Tennen, Patrick Finan, Anna Kratz, Brendt Parrish, Michael R Irwi. Comparison of cognitive behavioral and mindfulness meditation interventions on adaptation to rheumatoid arthritis for patients with and without history of recurrent depression. Journal of consulting and clinical psychology. vol 76. issue 3. 2008-07-29. PMID:18540734. ra patients with recurrent depression benefited most from m across several measures, including negative and positive affect and physicians' ratings of joint tenderness, indicating that the emotion regulation aspects of that treatment were most beneficial to those with chronic depressive features. 2008-07-29 2023-08-12 human
David J Nut. Relationship of neurotransmitters to the symptoms of major depressive disorder. The Journal of clinical psychiatry. vol 69 Suppl E1. 2008-07-10. PMID:18494537. a 2-dimensional model of neurotransmitter functions is discussed that describes depression as a mixture of 2 separate components--negative affect and the loss of positive affect--that can be considered in relation to the 3 amine neurotransmitters. 2008-07-10 2023-08-12 Not clear
Emily R Anderson, Debra A Hop. A review of the tripartite model for understanding the link between anxiety and depression in youth. Clinical psychology review. vol 28. issue 2. 2008-06-05. PMID:17582665. this tripartite model posits that anxiety and depression share a common component of negative affect, but can be differentiated by low positive affect associated with depression and high physiological hyperarousal associated with anxiety. 2008-06-05 2023-08-12 Not clear
Bonnie Spring, Jessica Werth Cook, Bradley Appelhans, Anne Maloney, Malia Richmond, Jocelyn Vaughn, Joseph Vanderveen, Donald Hedeke. Nicotine effects on affective response in depression-prone smokers. Psychopharmacology. vol 196. issue 3. 2008-05-30. PMID:17960366. yet little evidence supports this view, and nicotine's effect on positive affect deficiency in depression remains largely unstudied. 2008-05-30 2023-08-12 Not clear
Eric E Nelson, Deborah T Vinton, Lisa Berghorst, Kenneth E Towbin, Rebecca E Hommer, Daniel P Dickstein, Brendan A Rich, Melissa A Brotman, Daniel S Pine, Ellen Leibenluf. Brain systems underlying response flexibility in healthy and bipolar adolescents: an event-related fMRI study. Bipolar disorders. vol 9. issue 8. 2008-03-21. PMID:18076530. dysfunction in response flexibility may contribute to the pattern of behavioral and emotional dysregulation that is characteristic of bd, since depressed and manic patients respond inflexibly to emotional stimuli (i.e., anhedonia in the case of depression or inappropriate positive affect in the case of mania). 2008-03-21 2023-08-12 human
Jennifer S Silk, Ella Vanderbilt-Adriance, Daniel S Shaw, Erika E Forbes, Diana J Whalen, Neal D Ryan, Ronald E Dah. Resilience among children and adolescents at risk for depression: Mediation and moderation across social and neurobiological contexts. Development and psychopathology. vol 19. issue 3. 2008-01-18. PMID:17705905. we discuss several factors and their interactions across levels-including genetic factors, stress reactivity, positive affect, neural systems of reward, and sleep-as candidate processes contributing to resilience against depression at the neurobehavioral level. 2008-01-18 2023-08-12 Not clear
Andrew Steptoe, Katie O'Donnell, Ellena Badrick, Meena Kumari, Michael Marmo. Neuroendocrine and inflammatory factors associated with positive affect in healthy men and women: the Whitehall II study. American journal of epidemiology. vol 167. issue 1. 2008-01-08. PMID:17916595. salivary cortisol averaged over the day was inversely associated with positive affect after controlling for age, gender, income, ethnicity, body mass index, waist/hip ratio, smoking, paid employment, time of waking in the morning, and depression (p = 0.003). 2008-01-08 2023-08-12 Not clear