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Risk for Mania and Positive Emotional Responding: Too Much of a Good Thing?
Emotion (Washington, D.C.)
Short Title: Risk for Mania and Positive Emotional Responding
Format: Journal Article
Publication Year: n.d.
Pages: 23-33
Sources ID: 22955
Visibility: Private
Zotero Collections: Contexts of Contemplation Project
Abstract: (Show)
Although positive emotion research has begun to flourish, the extremes of positive emotion remain understudied. The present research used a multimethod approach to examine positive emotional disturbance by comparing participants at high and low risk for episodes of mania, which involves elevations in positive emotionality. Ninety participants were recruited into a high or low mania risk group according to responses on the Hypomanic Personality Scale. Participants’ subjective, expressive, and physiological emotional responses were gathered while they watched two positive, two negative, and one neutral film clip. Results suggested that participants at high risk for mania reported elevated positive emotion and irritability and also exhibited elevated cardiac vagal tone across positive, negative, and neutral films. Discussion focuses on the implications these findings have for the diagnosis and prevention of bipolar disorder, as well as for the general study of positive emotion.
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