Frontiers in Psychology | |
A Test for the ImplementationâMaintenance Model of Reappraisal | |
Christian Paret1  | |
关键词: emotion regulation; reappraisal; detachment; distancing; fear; anxiety; prefrontal cortex; | |
DOI : 10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00216 | |
学科分类:心理学(综合) | |
来源: Frontiers | |
【 摘 要 】
Reappraisal has been defined as a conscious, deliberate change in the way an emotional stimulus is interpreted, initiated in order to change its emotion-eliciting character (Gross, 2002). Reappraisal can be used to down-regulate negative emotions, including anxiety (reviewed in Kalisch, 2009). There is currently a strong interest in identifying the cognitive processes and neural substrates that mediate reappraisal. We have recently proposed a model (termed implementation–maintenance model or IMMO) that conceptualizes reappraisal as a temporally extended, dynamic, and multi-componential process (Kalisch, 2009). A key tenet of IMMO is that reappraisal episodes are marked by an early phase of implementation that may comprise strategy selection and retrieval of reappraisal material into working memory, and a later phase of maintenance that may comprise working memory and performance monitoring processes. These should be supported by dissociable neural networks. We here show, using a detachment-from-threat paradigm and concurrent functional magnetic resonance imaging, that reappraisal-related brain activity shifts from left posterior to right anterior parts of the lateral frontal cortex during the course of a reappraisal episode. Our data provide first empirical evidence for the existence of two separable reappraisal stages. Implications for further model development are discussed.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
【 预 览 】
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RO201904024671595ZK.pdf | 4815KB | download |