All Stories

  1. Emotion-related impulsivity is related to orbitofrontal cortical sulcation
  2. A multisample investigation of links between individual differences in emotion dysregulation and perceived helpfulness of interpersonal emotion regulation interactions.
  3. Behavioral indices of effort discounting are related to perseverance on a creativity task and to bipolar disorder.
  4. Urged to feel certain again: The role of emotion‐related impulsivity on the relationships between intolerance of uncertainty and OCD symptom severity
  5. Emotion-related impulsivity is related to orbitofrontal cortical sulcation
  6. Facets of Suicidal Ideation
  7. Experiences of Interpersonal Emotion Regulation for People with Heightened Emotions: An Examination in People with Bipolar Disorder and Those with High Aggression
  8. Neurobehavioral Affective Control Training (N-ACT): A randomized waitlist-controlled pilot trial to evaluate a novel transdiagnostic cognitive remediation program for emotion-related impulsivity and rumination (Preprint)
  9. Too Close for Comfort? Social Distance and Emotion Perception in Remitted Bipolar I Disorder
  10. Emotion-Triggered impulsivity relates to speech dysfluency during high arousal states
  11. Behavioral Indices of Effort Discounting are Related to Creative Accomplishment and Problem-Solving and to Bipolar Disorder
  12. A pilot randomised controlled trial to assess the feasibility and acceptability of recovery-focused therapy for older adults with bipolar disorder
  13. Sadder ≠ Wiser: Depressive Realism is not Robust to Replication
  14. Who disengages from emotion and when? An EMA study of how urgency and distress intolerance relate to daily emotion regulation.
  15. Emotion‐related impulsivity and suicidal ideation: Towards a more specific model
  16. Dynamic Regulatory Processes in the Transition From Suicidal Ideation to Action in Adults Leaving Inpatient Psychiatric Care: Protocol for an Intensive Longitudinal Study
  17. Shame on me for needing you: A multistudy examination of links between receiving interpersonal emotion regulation and experiencing shame.
  18. Dynamic Regulatory Processes in the Transition From Suicidal Ideation to Action in Adults Leaving Inpatient Psychiatric Care: Protocol for an Intensive Longitudinal Study (Preprint)
  19. Social and environmental variables as predictors of mania: a review of longitudinal research findings
  20. Emotion‐related impulsivity and rumination: Unique and conjoint effects on suicidal ideation, suicide attempts, and nonsuicidal self‐injury across two samples
  21. Impulsivity relates to multi-trial choice strategy in probabilistic reversal learning
  22. Online psychological intervention for bipolar disorder - disappointing results, redoubled efforts
  23. Social dominance and multiple dimensions of psychopathology: An experimental test of reactivity to leadership and subordinate roles
  24. Shame on me for needing you: A multistudy examination of links between receiving interpersonal emotion regulation and experiencing shame
  25. Inviting ASPPB to address systemic bias and racism: Reply to Turner et al. (2021).
  26. The Interpersonal Regulation Interaction Scale (IRIS): A multistudy investigation of receivers’ retrospective evaluations of interpersonal emotion regulation interactions.
  27. Development of a brief online intervention to address aggression in the context of emotion-related impulsivity: Evidence from a wait-list controlled trial
  28. Prevalence, elicitors, and expression of anger in 21st century mass shootings
  29. The Future of Women in Psychological Science
  30. A brief online intervention to address aggression in the context of emotion-related impulsivity for those treated for bipolar disorder: Feasibility, acceptability and pilot outcome data
  31. A pilot study of cognitive remediation in remitted major depressive disorder patients
  32. Maladaptive behavior and affect regulation: A functionalist perspective.
  33. Impulsive Responses to Positive and Negative Emotions: Parallel Neurocognitive Correlates and Their Implications
  34. Beliefs About One’s Non-Suicidal Self-Injury: The Experiences of Self-Injury Questionnaire (ESIQ)
  35. The enhanced examination for professional practice in psychology: A viable approach?
  36. A positive emotion regulation intervention for bipolar I disorder: Treatment development and initial outcomes
  37. Working memory interacts with emotion regulation to predict symptoms of mania
  38. The relationship between entrepreneurial intent, gender and personality
  39. Looking on the bright side and seeing it vividly: interpretation bias and involuntary mental imagery are related to risk for bipolar disorder
  40. Dietary intake of tryptophan tied emotion-related impulsivity in humans
  41. Effects of 5-hydroxytryptophan on distinct types of depression: a systematic review and meta-analysis
  42. How Will You Regulate My Emotions?: A Multistudy Investigation of Dimensions and Outcomes of Interpersonal Emotion Regulation Interactions
  43. Buffering against maladaptive perfectionism in bipolar disorder: The role of self-compassion
  44. A Model of Aggressive Behavior: Early Adversity, Impulsivity, and Response Inhibition
  45. Circadian modulation of human reward function: Is there an evidentiary signal in existing neuroimaging studies?
  46. Explaining interpersonal difficulty via implicit and explicit personality correlates of mania risk
  47. Identity in bipolar disorder: Self‐worth and achievement
  48. Neural responses to monetary incentives in bipolar disorder
  49. Perseverance of effort is related to lower depressive symptoms via authentic pride and perceived power
  50. Impulsive reactivity to emotion and vulnerability to psychopathology.
  51. Neurocognitive mechanisms of emotion‐related impulsivity: The role of arousal
  52. Does recent mania affect response to antidepressants in bipolar disorder? A re-analysis of STEP-BD data
  53. Parsing positivity in the bipolar spectrum: The effect of context on social decision-making
  54. Web-based intervention to improve quality of life in late stage bipolar disorder (ORBIT): randomised controlled trial protocol
  55. Multivariate associations of ideal affect with clinical symptoms.
  56. Cognitive control training for emotion-related impulsivity
  57. Double trouble: Weekend sleep changes are associated with increased impulsivity among adolescents with bipolar I disorder
  58. Mania Risk and Entrepreneurship: Overlapping Personality Traits
  59. Transdiagnostic assessment of repetitive negative thinking and responses to positive affect: Structure and predictive utility for depression, anxiety, and mania symptoms
  60. Cognitive deficits in bipolar disorders: Implications for emotion
  61. Major Depressive Disorder and Emotion-Related Impulsivity: Are Both Related to Cognitive Inhibition?
  62. Integrative Understanding of Familial Impulsivity, Early Adversity and Suicide Risk
  63. An integrative study of motivation and goal regulation processes in subclinical anxiety, depression and hypomania
  64. Simplifying profiles of comorbidity in bipolar disorder
  65. Valence specific response reversal deficits and risk for mania
  66. It’s Time to Broaden the Replicability Conversation: Thoughts for and From Clinical Psychological Science
  67. Time of Day Differences in Neural Reward Functioning in Healthy Young Men
  68. Willingness to Expend Effort Toward Reward and Extreme Ambitions in Bipolar I Disorder
  69. Explicit and implicit reinforcement learning across the psychosis spectrum.
  70. Toward a Functional View of the p Factor in Psychopathology
  71. A path model of different forms of impulsivity with externalizing and internalizing psychopathology: Towards greater specificity
  72. Positive urgency and emotional reactivity: Evidence for altered responding to positive stimuli.
  73. A clinician's quick guide to evidence‐based approaches: Bipolar disorder
  74. Towards recovery-oriented psychosocial interventions for bipolar disorder: Quality of life outcomes, stage-sensitive treatments, and mindfulness mechanisms
  75. Clinical Science and the Replicability Crisis
  76. Eye Tracking of Attention to Emotion in Bipolar I Disorder: Links to Emotion Regulation and Anxiety Comorbidity
  77. Cognitive and affective remediation training for mood disorders
  78. Positive urgency is related to difficulty inhibiting prepotent responses.
  79. Suicidality in Bipolar Disorder: The Role of Emotion‐Triggered Impulsivity
  80. Daily Actigraphy Profiles Distinguish Depressive and Interepisode States in Bipolar Disorder
  81. Anger in psychological disorders: Prevalence, presentation, etiology and prognostic implications
  82. Disparities in Treatment and Service Utilization Among Hispanics and Non-Hispanic Whites with Bipolar Disorder
  83. Impulsivity and Suicidality in Adolescent Inpatients
  84. Emotion regulation and mania risk: Differential responses to implicit and explicit cues to regulate
  85. Feasibility randomised controlled trial of Recovery-focused Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Older Adults with bipolar disorder (RfCBT-OA): study protocol
  86. The Influence of Trauma, Life Events, and Social Relationships on Bipolar Depression
  87. Harnessing the potential of community-based participatory research approaches in bipolar disorder
  88. Emotion in bipolar I disorder: Implications for functional and symptom outcomes.
  89. Emotion-relevant impulsivity predicts sustained anger and aggression after remission in bipolar I disorder
  90. Genetic polymorphisms related to behavioral approach and behavioral inhibition scales
  91. Mu opioid receptor polymorphism, early social adversity, and social traits
  92. Goals in bipolar I disorder: Big dreams predict more mania
  93. Is energy a stronger indicator of mood for those with bipolar disorder compared to those without bipolar disorder?
  94. Economic inequality is related to cross-national prevalence of psychotic symptoms
  95. Mania Risk, Overconfidence, and Ambition
  96. Understanding creativity in bipolar I disorder.
  97. Differentiating risk for mania and borderline personality disorder: The nature of goal regulation and impulsivity
  98. Creativity is linked to ambition across the bipolar spectrum
  99. Online mindfulness-based intervention for late-stage bipolar disorder: pilot evidence for feasibility and effectiveness
  100. Feeling Good and Taking a Chance? Associations of Hypomania Risk with Cognitive and Behavioral Risk Taking
  101. Creativity and Bipolar Disorder
  102. Attentional bias in euthymic bipolar I disorder
  103. Manic tendencies are not related to being an entrepreneur, intending to become an entrepreneur, or succeeding as an entrepreneur
  104. Threat sensitivity in bipolar disorder.
  105. Mania risk and creativity: A multi-method study of the role of motivation
  106. An Assessment of Emotional Reactivity to Frustration of Goal Pursuit in Euthymic Bipolar I Disorder
  107. Mania Risk is Associated with Dominance Behavior in an Interpersonal Negotiation Task
  108. The dominance behavioural system: A multidimensional transdiagnostic approach
  109. Adulthood personality correlates of childhood adversity
  110. An Evolving View of the Structure of Self-Regulation
  111. A genetic analysis of the validity of the Hypomanic Personality Scale
  112. Predicting change in symptoms of depression during the transition to university: The roles of BDNF and working memory capacity
  113. Nonverbal dominance behavior among individuals at risk for mania
  114. Gene Effects and G × E Interactions in the Differential Prediction of Three Aspects of Impulsiveness
  115. Task-evoked pupillometry provides a window into the development of short-term memory capacity
  116. The Interpersonal, Cognitive, and Social Nature of Depression
  117. Inadequate Treatment of Black Americans With Bipolar Disorder
  118. Origins and Functions of Positive Affect
  119. Emotion perception and quality of life in bipolar I disorder
  120. A test of the empirical network surrounding affective instability and the degree to which it is independent from neuroticism.
  121. Cross-national prevalence and cultural correlates of bipolar I disorder
  122. Two-Mode Models of Self-Regulation and Serotonergic Functioning: Divergent Manifestations of Impulse and Constraint
  123. Impulsive responses to emotion as a transdiagnostic vulnerability to internalizing and externalizing symptoms
  124. Impulsive responses to positive mood and reward are related to mania risk
  125. Iowa gambling task performance in euthymic bipolar I disorder: A meta-analysis and empirical study
  126. Rejection Sensitivity is Associated with Quality of Life, Psychosocial Outcome, and the Course of Depression in Euthymic Patients with Bipolar I Disorder
  127. Gender specific association of child abuse and adult cardiovascular disease in a sample of patients with Basal Cell Carcinoma
  128. A profile approach to impulsivity in bipolar disorder: the key role of strong emotions
  129. People with bipolar I disorder report avoiding rewarding activities and dampening positive emotion
  130. Positive Affect Enhances the Association of Hypomanic Personality and Cognitive Flexibility
  131. Chronic stressors and trauma: prospective influences on the course of bipolar disorder
  132. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor val66met genotype and early life stress effects upon bipolar course
  133. Emotion in Aging and Bipolar Disorder: Similarities, Differences, and Lessons for Further Research
  134. Major depressive disorder and impulsive reactivity to emotion: Toward a dual‐process view of depression
  135. Why are people with bipolar disorder creative? A hunt for mechanisms
  136. Hubristic Pride is Associated with Explicit and Implicit Power Motivation
  137. Reward Responses Inventory
  138. 7 Up 7 Down Inventory
  139. The 7 Up 7 Down Inventory: A 14-item measure of manic and depressive tendencies carved from the General Behavior Inventory.
  140. The dominance behavioral system and manic temperament: Motivation for dominance, self-perceptions of power, and socially dominant behaviors
  141. Impulsivity and risk for mania: Towards greater specificity
  142. Elevated ambitions for fame among persons diagnosed with bipolar I disorder.
  143. The dominance behavioral system and psychopathology: Evidence from self-report, observational, and biological studies.
  144. Basal Cell Carcinoma
  145. Family Influences on Mania‐Relevant Cognitions and Beliefs: A Cognitive Model of Mania and Reward
  146. The Double‐Edged Sword of Goal Engagement: Consequences of Goal Pursuit in Bipolar Disorder
  147. The Behavioral Activation System and Mania
  148. Creativity and bipolar disorder: Touched by fire or burning with questions?
  149. Bipolar Disorder
  150. Situational Rumination: A Method for Minimizing Retrospective Reporting Bias
  151. Negative Generalization and Symptoms of Anxiety Disorders
  152. Hooked on a feeling: Rumination about positive and negative emotion in inter-episode bipolar disorder.
  153. Emotional and physiological responses to normative and idiographic positive stimuli in bipolar disorder
  154. Tumor Site Immune Markers Associated with Risk for Subsequent Basal Cell Carcinomas
  155. Childhood adversity interacts separately with 5-HTTLPR and BDNF to predict lifetime depression diagnosis
  156. Quality of life and impulsivity in bipolar disorder
  157. Serotonin Transporter Polymorphism Interacts With Childhood Adversity to Predict Aspects of Impulsivity
  158. Three studies on self-report scales to detect bipolar disorder
  159. Positivity biases during extreme challenge may spell trouble in bipolar disorder
  160. Emotional responses to normative and idiographic positive stimuli: Experience, behavior, and psychophysiology
  161. Elevated approach motivation as an explanation for excessive anger in bipolar
  162. Authentic and hubristic pride: Differential relations to aspects of goal regulation, affect, and self-control
  163. A discrete emotions approach to positive emotion disturbance in depression
  164. Depressive and manic symptoms are not opposite poles in bipolar disorder
  165. The clinical significance of creativity in bipolar disorder
  166. Pushing and Coasting in Dynamic Goal Pursuit
  167. Psychopathology
  168. On the role of goal dysregulation in the treatment of bipolar disorder.
  169. The Role of Depression, Shame-Proneness, and Guilt-Proneness in Predicting Criticism of Relatives Towards People With Bipolar Disorder
  170. The Cognition Checklist for Mania—Revised (CCL-M-R): Factor-Analytic Structure and Links with Risk for Mania, Diagnoses of Mania, and Current Symptoms
  171. Depressive Symptoms and Affective Reactivity to Maternal Praise and Criticism
  172. Two-Mode Models of Self-Regulation as a Tool for Conceptualizing Effects of the Serotonin System in Normal Behavior and Diverse Disorders
  173. Reflective and ruminative processing of positive emotional memories in bipolar disorder and healthy controls
  174. Elevated expectancies among persons diagnosed with bipolar disorder
  175. Assessment tools for adult bipolar disorder.
  176. Preventing Mania: A Preliminary Examination of the GOALS Program
  177. Social and familial factors in the course of bipolar disorder: Basic processes and relevant interventions.
  178. Positive affect regulation in anxiety disorders
  179. Positive Emotional Traits and Ambitious Goals among People at Risk for Mania: The Need for Specificity
  180. Affective reactivity in response to criticism in remitted bipolar disorder: a laboratory analog of expressed emotion
  181. Cognitive correlates of mania risk: are responses to success, positive moods, and manic symptoms distinct or overlapping?
  182. Do positive emotions predict symptomatic change in bipolar disorder?
  183. Psychosocial mechanisms in bipolar disorder.
  184. Commonalities and differences in characteristics of persons at risk for narcissism and mania
  185. An Acceptance-Based Psychoeducation Intervention to Reduce Expressed Emotion in Relatives of Bipolar Patients
  186. Serotonergic function, two-mode models of self-regulation, and vulnerability to depression: What depression has in common with impulsive aggression.
  187. Tendencies Toward Mania and Tendencies Toward Depression Have Distinct Motivational, Affective, and Cognitive Correlates
  188. Emotion and Psychopathology: Bridging Affective and Clinical Science
  189. "Life events as predictors of mania and depression in bipolar I disorder": Correction to Johnson et al. (2008).
  190. Life events as predictors of mania and depression in bipolar I disorder.
  191. Development of the treatment attitudes questionnaire in bipolar disorder
  192. Bipolar disorders across the lifespan
  193. Cognitive responses to failure and success relate uniquely to bipolar depression versus mania.
  194. Risk for mania and positive emotional responding: Too much of a good thing?
  195. Implicit motivation and explicit motivation: Associations with bipolar vulnerability
  196. Positive Generalization Scale
  197. Treatment Attitudes Questionnaire
  198. Responses to Positive Affect Questionnaire
  199. Mania Risk and Creativity: The Role of Overinclusive Categorization
  200. Cognitive inhibition across psychopathologies
  201. Unique association of approach motivation and mania vulnerability
  202. Ruminative Responses to Negative and Positive Affect Among Students Diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder and Major Depressive Disorder
  203. Dispositional Rumination in Individuals with a Depression History
  204. Positive Mood Induction and Facial Affect Recognition among Students at Risk for Mania
  205. Bipolar disorder: What can psychotherapists learn from the cognitive research?
  206. Responses to Positive Affect: A Self-Report Measure of Rumination and Dampening
  207. Emotion and psychopathology: Bridging affective and clinical science.
  208. Does processing of emotional stimuli predict symptomatic improvement and diagnostic recovery from major depression?
  209. Over-Reactions to Positive Emotion---Is There More to Hypomania Than Meets the Eye?
  210. Emotion and Bipolar Disorder.
  211. Role of treatment alliance in the clinical management of bipolar disorder: Stronger alliances prospectively predict fewer manic symptoms
  212. Life events and juvenile bipolar disorder: Conceptual issues and early findings
  213. Extreme Goal Setting and Vulnerability to Mania Among Undiagnosed Young Adults
  214. Reactivity to a laboratory stressor among individuals with bipolar I disorder in full or partial remission.
  215. The prospective impact of sleep duration on depression and mania
  216. The Psychopathology and Treatment of Bipolar Disorder
  217. Willingly Approached Set of Statistically Unlikely Pursuits
  218. Self-referentiality and emotional responding: clues from depression
  219. Early alliance, alliance ruptures, and symptom change in a nonrandomized trial of cognitive therapy for avoidant and obsessive-compulsive personality disorders.
  220. Life events in bipolar disorder: Towards more specific models
  221. Suicidality in Bipolar I Disorder
  222. Cognitive, Behavioral, and Affective Responses to Reward: Links with Hypomanic Symptoms
  223. Distinctions between bipolar and unipolar depression
  224. Mania and dysregulation in goal pursuit: a review
  225. Hypomanic vulnerability, terror management, and materialism
  226. Spanish-Language Measures of Mania and Depression.
  227. Coherence and Specificity of Information-Processing Biases in Depression and Social Phobia.
  228. Negative Cognitions Predict the Course of Bipolar Depression, Not Mania
  229. Negative Cognitions Predict the Course of Bipolar Depression, Not Mania
  230. Goal Appraisals and Vulnerability to Bipolar Disorder: A Personal Projects Analysis
  231. Dynamical Patterns in Bipolar Depression
  232. Screening for Bipolar Disorder
  233. Current treatments for bipolar disorder: A review and update for psychologists.
  234. Postpartum Depression in Women Receiving Public Assistance: Pilot Study of an Interpersonal-Therapy-Oriented Group Intervention
  235. Can personality traits predict increases in manic and depressive symptoms?
  236. Sequential interactions in the parent–child communications of depressed fathers and depressed mothers.
  237. Sequential interactions in the parent-child communications of depressed fathers and depressed mothers.
  238. Increases in manic symptoms after life events involving goal attainment.
  239. Coping and medication adherence in bipolar disorder
  240. Social support and self-esteem predict changes in bipolar depression but not mania
  241. Psychosocial approaches to the treatment of bipolar disorder
  242. Sequential interactions in the marital communication of depressed men and women.
  243. Increases in manic symptoms after life events involving goal attainment.
  244. Sequential interactions in the marital communication of depressed men and women.
  245. Social support and the course of bipolar disorder.
  246. Social support and the course of bipolar disorder.
  247. Parent–child interaction among depressed fathers and mothers: Impact on child functioning.
  248. Negative life events and time to recovery from episodes of bipolar disorder.
  249. Marital interactions of depressed men and women.
  250. Psychosocial functioning in children of alcoholic fathers.
  251. Life events and bipolar disorder: Implications from biological theories.
  252. Clinical characteristics associated with interpersonal depression: symptoms, course and treatment response
  253. Toward the standardization of life stress assessment: Definitional discrepancies and inconsistencies in methods
  254. Event-related potential correlates of IQ
  255. The Dimensions of Life Stress and the Specificity of Disorder
  256. Effects of situational variables on the interpersonal behavior of families with an aggressive adolescent
  257. Inconsistent communication: A simplified method for selecting messages
  258. Drinking, drinking styles and drug use in children of alcoholics, depressives and controls.
  259. Bipolar Disorder