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Oxford Handbook of Positive Emotion and Psychopathology [Kõva köide]

(Assistant Professor and Director, Positive Emotion and Psychopathology Laboratory, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Colorado Boulder)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 654 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 180x257x48 mm, kaal: 1361 g
  • Sari: Oxford Library of Psychology
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Oct-2019
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0190653205
  • ISBN-13: 9780190653200
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 654 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 180x257x48 mm, kaal: 1361 g
  • Sari: Oxford Library of Psychology
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Oct-2019
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0190653205
  • ISBN-13: 9780190653200
Teised raamatud teemal:
Considerable research has been devoted to understanding how positive emotional processes influence our thoughts and behaviors, and the resulting body of work clearly indicates that positive emotion is a vital ingredient in our human quest towards well-being and thriving. Yet the role of positive emotion in psychopathology has been underemphasized, such that comparatively less scientific attention has been devoted to understanding ways in which positive emotions might influence and be influenced by psychological disturbance.

Presenting cutting-edge scientific work from an internationally-renowned group of contributors, The Oxford Handbook of Positive Emotion and Psychopathology provides unparalleled insight into the role of positive emotions in mental health and illness. The book begins with a comprehensive overview of key psychological processes that link positive emotional experience and psychopathological outcomes. The following section focuses on specific psychological disorders, including depression, anxiety, trauma, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia, as well as developmental considerations. The third and final section of the Handbook discusses translational implications of this research and how examining populations characterized by positive emotion disturbance enables a better understanding of psychiatric course and risk factors, while simultaneously generating opportunities to bridge gaps between basic science models and psychosocial interventions. With its rich and multi-layered focus, The Oxford Handbook of Positive Emotion and Psychopathology will be of interest to researchers, teachers, and students from a range of disciplines, including social psychology, clinical psychology and psychiatry, biological psychology and health psychology, affective science, and neuroscience.

Arvustused

The experience of positive emotions - of pride and joy, of satisfaction and affection - is a large part of what makes a life worth living. This book brings together many of the world's foremost experts to summarize the scientific state of the art. An essential volume for researchers and students alike. * Daniel Gilbert, PhD, Edgar Pierce Professor of Psychology, Harvard University * Understandably, psychopathology research has traditionally focused on negative emotions like anxiety and sadness. The crucial role of positive emotions is in this extraordinary collection of essays explored in depth by leading researchers who illuminate the complex relationship between positive emotions and mental health. * Angela Duckworth, PhD, Christopher H. Browne Distinguished Professor of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania * This edited volume imparts a valuable message: The pursuit of positive emotion - and its experience in the 'wrong' time, place, or amount - can seriously backfire. Here, the leading stars overturn conventional wisdom on the role of positive emotions in psychopathology and in our daily lives. * Sonja Lyubomirsky, PhD, Professor and Vice Chair of Psychology, University of California Riverside *

1 An Introduction to Positive Emotion and Psychopathology
1(12)
June Gruber
Margaret R. Tobias
Michael C. Flux
Kirsten E. Gilbert
Part I Key Psychological Processes
2 Pursuing Positive Emotion: When and Why Could Wanting to Feel Happy Be Linked to Psychopathology?
13(14)
Brett Q. Ford
3 Pleasant Emotions and Psychopathology: The Importance of Meta-Emotion
27(10)
Howard Berenbaum
Phillip I. Chow
4 Positive and Negative Emotion Goals in Psychopathology
37(13)
Yael Millgram
Maya Tamir
5 A Regulatory Flexibility Perspective on Positive Emotion
50(14)
Philippa-Sophie Connolly
Thomas D. Hull
George A. Bonanno
6 Positive Emotional Disturbance in Psychopathology: A Hierarchical Structural Approach
64(17)
David Watson
Kasey Stanton
7 A Neuroscientific Hypothesis Concerning Poor Memory for Positive Material in Depression
81(15)
Daniel G. Dillon
8 Indices and Correlates of Positive Emotion in Psychopathology: Methodological and Design Considerations
96(23)
Sunny J. Dutra
Marianne Reddan
John R. Purcell
Hillary C. Devlin
Keith M. Welker
9 Attentional Bias and Well-Being: How the Bias That Feels Best Can Be Bad for Us
119(18)
Ben Grajton
Colin MacLeod
10 Goal Dysregulation in Depression, Mania, and Schizophrenia
137(24)
Sheri L. Johnson
Amy H. Sanchez
Charles S. Carver
11 Reward Hypersensitivity in Bipolar Spectrum Disorders: From Mechanisms to Markers to Treatment
161(23)
Robin Nusslock
James Glazer
Tommy H. Ng
Madison K. Titone
Lauren B. Alloy
12 A Liking Versus Wanting Perspective on Emotion and the Brain
184(13)
Kent C. Berridge
13 Positive Emotion-Based Impulsivity as a Transdiagnostic Endophenotype
197(26)
Miji Um
Melissa A. Cyders
14 Neurobiological Reward-Related Abnormalities Across Mood Disorders
223(16)
Alexis E. Whitton
Michael T. Treadway
Manon L. Ironside
Diego A. Pizzagalli
15 Positive Emotion Regulation in Depression
239(14)
W. Michael Vanderlind
Jutta Joormann
Part II Applications to key Psychopathologies
16 Positive Valence System Dysregulation in Psychosis: A Comparative Analysis
253(31)
Deanna M. Barch
David Pagliaccio
Katherine Luking
17 Don't Worry, Be Happy: Positive Emotion Generation and Regulation in Social Anxiety Disorder
284(14)
Hooria Jazaieri
Amanda S. Morrison
James J. Gross
18 Positive Emotion in Generalized Anxiety Disorder
298(14)
Ilana Seager
Douglas S. Mennin
Amelia Aldao
19 Specifying the Connection Between Reward Processing and Antisocial Psychopathology Across Development: Review, Integration, and Future Directions
312(21)
Suzanne Estrada
Scott Tillem
Allison Stuppy-Sullivan
Arielle Baskin-Sommers
20 Positive Emotion in Borderline Personality Disorder
333(20)
Jill M. Hooley
Sara R. Masland
21 Reward Dysregulation in Sexual Function
353(14)
Nicole Prause
22 Positive Mood States and Gambling Disorder
367(13)
Sarah W. Yip
Zu Wei Zhai
Iris M. Balodis
Marc N. Potenza
23 Positive Affect and Biological Rhythms: Interactions in General Population and Clinical Samples
380(44)
Jamie Byrne
Greg Murray
24 Positive Emotion Dysregulation in Eating Disorders and Obesity
424(20)
Edward A. Selby
Emily Panza
Maribel Plasencia
25 Effects of Positive Emotion on Pain: Mechanisms and Interventions
444(9)
Emma Hitchcock
Afton L. Hassett
Tor D. Wager
26 Why Do People Hurt Themselves? Self-Harm as a Means to Attain Positive Emotion
453(12)
Peter J. Franz
Evan M. Kleiman
Matthew K. Nock
27 Neurobiology of Positive Emotion Disruption in Neurodegenerative Disease
465(17)
Virginia E. Sturm
Robert W. Levenson
28 Reward Disruption in the Development of Depression
482(14)
Erika E. Forbes
Melynda D. Casement
29 Protector and Casualty: The Dual Processes of Positive Emotion in Early-Life Adversity
496(29)
Meg Dennison
Katie McLaughlin
Part III Translational Implications
30 Transdiagnostic Treatments for Enhancing Positive Affect and Well-Being
525(14)
Hannah Boettcher
Steven Sandage
Heather M. Latin
David H. Barlow
31 Augmenting Cognitive Behavioral Therapy to Build Positive Mood in Depression
539(22)
Bamaby D. Dunn
32 Facilitation of Positive Emotions Through Mindfulness-Based Therapy
561(14)
Nicole Geschwind
Saara Martinmdki
Eric L. Garland
3 Psychological Treatments for Anhedonia: Reward Anticipation, Consumption, and Learning
575(21)
Halina J. Dour
Richard T. LeBeau
Michelle G. Craske
34 From Feeling Good to Doing Good
596(17)
Gabriele Oettingen
Peter M. Gollwitzer
Index 613
June Gruber, PhD, is an Assistant Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at the University of Colorado, and Director of the Positive Emotion and Psychopathology Laboratory. A licensed clinical psychologist, Dr. Gruber has published over 100 articles and chapters, and her work has been recognized by the Association for Psychological Science's (APS) Rising Star Award and Janet Taylor Spence Award for Transformative Early Career Contributions, NARSAD Young Investigator Award, and Yale University's Arthur Greer Memorial Prize for Outstanding Junior Faculty, and she was named an APS Fellow. She co-writes a mentoring column "Letters to Young Scientists" for Science Careers, and co-edited the book Positive Emotion: Integrating the Light Sides and Dark Sides. Dr. Gruber is also an Associate Editor and former Interim Editor-in-Chief for Perspectives on Psychological Science.