All Relations between Depression and positive emotion

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Alan Frazer, David A Morila. What should animal models of depression model? Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews. vol 29. issue 4-5. 2005-08-16. PMID:15893377. psychological studies have suggested that the myriad symptoms of depression and anxiety may be subsumed within a more limited number of distinct behavioral dimensions, such as negative affect (neuroticism), positive affect, or physiologic hyperarousal. 2005-08-16 2023-08-12 Not clear
Michael T Rogan, Kam Sam Leon, David L Perez, Eric R Kande. Distinct neural signatures for safety and danger in the amygdala and striatum of the mouse. Neuron. vol 46. issue 2. 2005-05-26. PMID:15848808. concurrent electrophysiological measurements identified a safety learning-induced long-lasting depression of cs-evoked activity in the lateral nucleus of the amygdala, consistent with fear reduction, and an increase of cs-evoked activity in a region of the striatum involved in positive affect, euphoric responses, and reward. 2005-05-26 2023-08-12 mouse
Manfred Stommel, Margot E Kurtz, J C Kurtz, Charles W Given, Barbara A Give. A longitudinal analysis of the course of depressive symptomatology in geriatric patients with cancer of the breast, colon, lung, or prostate. Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association. vol 23. issue 6. 2005-02-23. PMID:15546224. this study mapped the trajectory of depression and its components (depressive mood, somatic expression of depression, and lack of positive affect) for 1 year after an initial cancer diagnosis, revealing the complex nature of the psychological response to the cancer experience. 2005-02-23 2023-08-12 Not clear
Joan M Cook, Helen Orvaschel, Edward Simco, Michel Hersen, Thomas Joine. A test of the tripartite model of depression and anxiety in older adult psychiatric outpatients. Psychology and aging. vol 19. issue 3. 2005-02-02. PMID:15382995. negative affect was significantly related to depression and anxiety symptoms and syndromes, and positive affect was more highly related to depression than anxiety symptoms and syndromes. 2005-02-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
M Pinquart, S Sörense. Associations of caregiver stressors and uplifts with subjective well-being and depressive mood: a meta-analytic comparison. Aging & mental health. vol 8. issue 5. 2005-01-24. PMID:15511742. we integrate results from 60 studies on informal caregivers' subjective well-being (e.g., positive affect, life-satisfaction) and contrast them with the result of studies on caregiver depression. 2005-01-24 2023-08-12 Not clear
Jeff Laurent, Salvatore J Catanzaro, Thomas E Joine. Development and preliminary validation of the physiological hyperarousal scale for children. Psychological assessment. vol 16. issue 4. 2005-01-11. PMID:15584796. considerable empirical support exists for the positive affect and negative affect components of the tripartite model of anxiety and depression proposed by l. a. clark and d. watson (1991); however, less attention has been paid to the physiological hyperarousal component of the model. 2005-01-11 2023-08-12 Not clear
Laura Campbell-Sills, Gabrielle I Liverant, Timothy A Brow. Psychometric evaluation of the behavioral inhibition/behavioral activation scales in a large sample of outpatients with anxiety and mood disorders. Psychological assessment. vol 16. issue 3. 2005-01-10. PMID:15456380. convergent and discriminant validity of the bis/bas were supported by findings that the subscales correlated most strongly with measures of neighboring personality constructs (e.g., bis with neuroticism, bas with positive affect) than with measures of current anxiety and depression symptoms. 2005-01-10 2023-08-12 Not clear
David A Morilak, Alan Fraze. Antidepressants and brain monoaminergic systems: a dimensional approach to understanding their behavioural effects in depression and anxiety disorders. The international journal of neuropsychopharmacology. vol 7. issue 2. 2004-08-31. PMID:15003145. negative or positive affect) that are affected in depression and anxiety disorders, and that are ameliorated by drug treatment. 2004-08-31 2023-08-12 Not clear
Tamar Pincus, Amanda C de C Williams, Steven Vogel, Andy Fiel. The development and testing of the depression, anxiety, and positive outlook scale (DAPOS). Pain. vol 109. issue 1-2. 2004-07-12. PMID:15082140. in addition, there is no accepted measurement for positive emotions which are more than the absence of depression. 2004-07-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
Kristof Vansteelandt, Guido Pieters, Walter Vandereycken, Laurence Claes, Michel Probst, Iven Van Mechele. Hyperactivity in anorexia nervosa: a case study using experience sampling methodology. Eating behaviors. vol 5. issue 1. 2004-05-06. PMID:15000955. results indicate that the patient's tendency to be hyperactive was (a) positively related to her weight preoccupation and her negative emotions, and (b) negatively related to her positive emotions and the absence of depression. 2004-05-06 2023-08-12 Not clear
Judith Tedlie Moskowit. Positive affect predicts lower risk of AIDS mortality. Psychosomatic medicine. vol 65. issue 4. 2004-04-29. PMID:12883113. the objective of this study was to test the association of positive affect as measured by the center for epidemiologic studies depression scale (ces-d) with risk of aids mortality, controlling for the other ces-d subscales and laboratory measures of disease progression. 2004-04-29 2023-08-12 Not clear
Suzanne Meeks, Janet Woodruff-Borden, Colin A Dep. Structural differentiation of self-reported depression and anxiety in late life. Journal of anxiety disorders. vol 17. issue 6. 2004-04-27. PMID:14624815. research has shown impressive support for tripartite models of anxiety and depression that include a common factor of negative affect, and the unique factors positive affect and arousal. 2004-04-27 2023-08-12 Not clear
Véronique De Guch. Stability of neuroticism and alexithymia in somatization. Comprehensive psychiatry. vol 44. issue 6. 2004-04-14. PMID:14610725. the main purpose of this study was to examine the temporal stability of neuroticism and alexithymia in patients presenting to their primary care physician with medically unexplained symptoms, and compare this to the stability of negative and positive affect, anxiety, and depression. 2004-04-14 2023-08-12 Not clear
Heather A K Jacques, Eric J Mas. A test of the tripartite model of anxiety and depression in elementary and high school boys and girls. Journal of abnormal child psychology. vol 32. issue 1. 2004-03-31. PMID:14998108. the applicability of the tripartite model of emotion, which distinguishes the shared aspect of depression and anxiety, negative affect (na), from their respective specific components of low positive affect (pa) and physiological hyperarousal (ph), was examined in 472 elementary and high school students. 2004-03-31 2023-08-12 Not clear
E B Dubnitskaia, B A Volel\. [The experience of pyrazidol use in the treatment of non-psychotic depression]. Zhurnal nevrologii i psikhiatrii imeni S.S. Korsakova. vol 103. issue 8. 2004-03-12. PMID:14564775. the authors believe that pirazidolum may be referred to antidepressants which are effective for depression with a prevalent positive affect. 2004-03-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
M P McCabe, L A Ricciardelli, S Banfiel. Body image, strategies to change muscles and weight, and puberty: do they impact on positive and negative affect among adolescent boys and girls? Eating behaviors. vol 2. issue 2. 2004-03-10. PMID:15001042. respondents also completed the pubertal development scale, the depression and anxiety scales of the depression anxiety and stress scale, and the positive affect items from the positive and negative affect scale. 2004-03-10 2023-08-12 Not clear
Roseanne Clark, Audrey Tluczek, Amy Wenze. Psychotherapy for postpartum depression: a preliminary report. The American journal of orthopsychiatry. vol 73. issue 4. 2004-03-02. PMID:14609406. a postpartum depression treatment efficacy study showed both a mother-infant psychotherapy group and interpersonal psychotherapy to be superior to a waiting-list comparison group in reducing maternal depressive symptoms, improving mothers' perceptions of their infants' adaptability and reinforcement value, and increasing mothers' positive affect and verbalization with their infants. 2004-03-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
Michelle L Keightley, David A Seminowicz, R Michael Bagby, Paul T Costa, Philippe Fossati, Helen S Mayber. Personality influences limbic-cortical interactions during sad mood induction. NeuroImage. vol 20. issue 4. 2004-02-12. PMID:14683707. healthy subjects scoring both low on the dispositional depression facet of neuroticism (n3) and high on the positive emotions facet of extraversion (e6) were compared to those scoring high on the depression facet (n3) and low on positive emotions (e6), a combination of traits previously linked to normal variations in mood reactivity. 2004-02-12 2023-08-12 human
Julie K Cremeans-Smith, Mary Ann Parris Stephens, Melissa M Franks, Lynn M Martire, Jennifer A Druley, William C Wojn. Spouses' and physicians' perceptions of pain severity in older women with osteoarthritis: dyadic agreement and patients' well-being. Pain. vol 106. issue 1-2. 2004-01-13. PMID:14581107. we hypothesized that compared to disagreement between patients and role partners, dyadic agreement would be related to better psychological well-being (more disease-specific self-efficacy and positive affect, and less depression). 2004-01-13 2023-08-12 human
Dana Rabois, David A F Haag. The influence of cognitive coping and mood on smokers' self-efficacy and temptation. Addictive behaviors. vol 28. issue 3. 2003-06-04. PMID:12628627. this latter finding suggests that smokers with a history of depression may respond well to interventions aimed at increasing positive affect and augmenting positive cognitive coping skills. 2003-06-04 2023-08-12 Not clear