A cognitive neuroscience hypothesis of mood and depression.
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Emotion Regulation Therapy for Generalized Anxiety Disorder.Depression, rumination and the default networkThe theory of constructed emotion: an active inference account of interoception and categorization.Dysregulation of limbic and auditory networks in tinnitus.The proactive brain: memory for predictions.Comparison of neurogenic effects of fluoxetine, duloxetine and running in mice.A functional role for modality-specific perceptual systems in conceptual representations.The default mode network and recurrent depression: a neurobiological model of cognitive risk factors.Stroke lesion in cortical neural circuits and post-stroke incidence of major depressive episode: a 4-month prospective study.Neural correlates of generation and inhibition of verbal association patterns in mood disordersAN OPEN TRIAL OF EMOTION REGULATION THERAPY FOR GENERALIZED ANXIETY DISORDER AND COOCCURRING DEPRESSIONAmygdala subregions tied to SSRI and placebo response in patients with social anxiety disorder.Intrinsically motivated oculomotor exploration guided by uncertainty reduction and conditioned reinforcement in non-human primatesPredictive feedback and conscious visual experience.Redefining the Role of Limbic Areas in Cortical ProcessingCognitive Vulnerability to Major Depression: View from the Intrinsic Network and Cross-network InteractionsHow robust is the language architecture? The case of moodAdvancing Emotion Regulation Perspectives on Psychopathology: The Challenge of Distress DisordersEmotion Regulation Therapy: A Mechanism-Targeted Treatment for Disorders of DistressMood dysregulation and stabilization: perspectives from emotional cognitive neuroscience.The role of the parahippocampal cortex in cognition.Linking major depression and the neural substrates of associative processing.Associative Activation and Its Relation to Exploration and Exploitation in the Brain.Dynamic network communication as a unifying neural basis for cognition, development, aging, and disease.It's not just what we encode, but how we encode it: associations between neuroticism and learning.Spontaneous Thought and Vulnerability to Mood Disorders: The Dark Side of the Wandering Mind.Creative mood swings: divergent and convergent thinking affect mood in opposite ways.Revisiting default mode network function in major depression: evidence for disrupted subsystem connectivity.What Drives False Memories in Psychopathology? A Case for Associative Activation.The Alteration of Irisin-Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor Axis Parallels Severity of Distress Disorder in Bronchial Asthma Patients.Good vibrations: Global processing can increase the pleasantness of touch.Two critical brain networks for generation and combination of remote associations.Neurogenic marker abnormalities in the hippocampus in dementia with Lewy bodies.Abnormal brain anatomical topological organization of the cognitive-emotional and the frontoparietal circuitry in major depressive disorder.Human preferences are biased towards associative information.Pleasures of the Mind: What Makes Jokes and Insight Problems Enjoyable.The effect of mental progression on mood.An active inference theory of allostasis and interoception in depression.The Impact of Thought Speed and Variability on Psychological State and Threat Perception: Further Exploration of the Theory of Mental Motion
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P2860
A cognitive neuroscience hypothesis of mood and depression.
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
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scientific article published on 12 October 2009
@en
vedecký článok
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vetenskaplig artikel
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videnskabelig artikel
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vědecký článek
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name
A cognitive neuroscience hypothesis of mood and depression.
@en
A cognitive neuroscience hypothesis of mood and depression.
@nl
type
label
A cognitive neuroscience hypothesis of mood and depression.
@en
A cognitive neuroscience hypothesis of mood and depression.
@nl
prefLabel
A cognitive neuroscience hypothesis of mood and depression.
@en
A cognitive neuroscience hypothesis of mood and depression.
@nl
P2860
P1476
A cognitive neuroscience hypothesis of mood and depression
@en
P2093
P2860
P304
P356
10.1016/J.TICS.2009.08.009
P50
P577
2009-10-12T00:00:00Z