keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38081541/art-delivered-episodic-future-thinking-reduces-delay-discounting-a-phase-iia-proof-of-concept-trial
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer Hudson, Sergej Grunevski, John Sebelius, Richard Yi
INTRODUCTION: High rates of delay discounting (DD), or the preference for immediate rewards over delayed rewards, is associated with substance use disorder (SUD). Lower rates of DD predict better treatment outcomes, thus strategies that reduce DD may support SUD recovery. The process of vividly imagining a future event, known as episodic future thinking (EFT), may be a particularly viable approach to reduce DD. Some limited research has examined delivery of EFT in treatment settings, using verbal prompts that are typical of studies in non-treatment settings...
December 9, 2023: J Subst Use Addict Treat
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38025283/controlling-intrusive-thoughts-of-future-fears-under-stress
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephanie M Ashton, Tom Smeets, Conny W E M Quaedflieg
Negative outlooks of our future may foster unwanted and intrusive thoughts. To some extent, individuals have control over their ability to suppress intrusions and downregulate their frequency. Acute stress impairs intentional suppression, leading to an increased frequency of intrusions. The aim of this study was to gain insight into the mechanism underlying stress-induced impairments in intentional suppression of intrusions by investigating the combined and independent roles of the two major stress hormones, noradrenaline and cortisol...
November 2023: Neurobiology of Stress
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37955039/patients-with-cocaine-use-disorder-exhibit-reductions-in-delay-discounting-with-episodic-future-thinking-cues-regardless-of-incarceration-history
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Taylor M Torres, Stuart R Steinhauer, Steven D Forman, Sarah E Forster
Research examining episodic future thinking (EFT; i.e., imagining oneself in future contexts) in community samples has demonstrated reduced discounting of delayed rewards when personalized event cues are included to prompt EFT related to reward latencies. While this EFT effect was recently demonstrated in individuals with substance use disorders, it is not yet known if it manifests similarly in individuals with and without a significant incarceration history-the latter being at elevated risk for negative outcomes including criminal recidivism...
December 2023: Addictive Behaviors Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37928570/using-an-episodic-specificity-induction-to-improve-children-s-future-thinking
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Annick F N Tanguay, Olivia Gardam, Jane Archibald, Gladys Ayson, Cristina M Atance
Episodic future thinking (EFT) is the ability to subjectively pre-experience a specific future event. Future-oriented cognition in young children positively predicts physical health and financial status later in life. Can EFT be improved in children, even temporarily? Developmental research emphasizes the importance of thinking about one's own near future to enhance EFT, whereas research in adults suggests benefits reside in constructing a richly detailed event. We bridged the two perspectives to examine whether a procedure, the "episodic specificity induction" (ESI), could be adapted to encourage an episodic mode of thinking in children, benefitting performance on a variety of subsequent EFT tasks...
2023: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37907967/the-relationship-between-mood-disorders-personality-disorder-and-suicidality-in-adolescence-does-general-personality-disturbance-play-a-significant-role-in-predicting-suicidal-behavior
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Riccardo Williams, Marco Chiesa, Marta Moselli, Camillla Frattini, MariaPia Casini, Peter Fonagy
INTRODUCTION: Current research points to the importance personality pathology and Major Depression e as relevant psycopathological risk factors for understanding suicidal risk in adolescence. Literature has mainly focused on the role of BPD, however current orientations in personality pathological functioning suggest that BPD may be the representative of a general personality disturbance, a factor of vulnerability underlying diverse psychopathological variants and aspects of maladaptive functioning...
November 1, 2023: Borderline Personality Disorder and Emotion Dysregulation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37904663/perceived-plausibility-modulates-hippocampal-activity-in-episodic-counterfactual-thinking
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kaylee Miceli, Ricardo Morales-Torres, Ari Khoudary, Leonard Faul, Natasha Parikh, Felipe De Brigard
Episodic counterfactual thinking (ECT) consists of imagining alternative outcomes to past personal events. Previous research has shown that ECT shares common neural substrates with episodic future thinking (EFT): our ability to imagine possible future events. Both ECT and EFT have been shown to critically depend on the hippocampus, and past research has explored hippocampal engagement as a function of the perceived plausibility of an imagined future event. However, the extent to which the hippocampus is modulated by perceived plausibility during ECT is unknown...
October 31, 2023: Hippocampus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37870893/episodic-thinking-in-alzheimer-s-disease-through-the-lens-of-language-linguistic-analysis-and-transformer-based-classification
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rui He, Xiaofeng Yuan, Wolfram Hinzen
PURPOSE: Episodic memory decline is a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and linked to deficits in episodic thinking directed to the future. We addressed the question whether a deficit in episodic thinking can be picked up directly from connected speech and its detection can be automatized. METHOD: We linguistically classified 2,809 utterances (including embedded clauses in the utterances) from picture descriptions from 70 healthy older controls, 82 people with mild probable AD (pAD), and 46 people with moderate pAD for whether they were episodic, nonepisodic, or "other" (e...
October 23, 2023: American Journal of Speech-language Pathology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37829062/future-oriented-cognition-links-to-mental-health-problems-and-mental-wellbeing-in-preschool-aged-and-primary-school-aged-children
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica Marks, Silvia Schneider, Babett Voigt
Future-oriented cognition plays a manifold role for adults' mental health. The present study aimed to investigate the relationship between future-oriented cognition and mental health in N  = 191 children aged between 3 and 7 years. Parents completed an online-questionnaire including children's future-oriented cognition (e.g., episodic foresight; Children Future Thinking Questionnaire; CFTQ), children's mental health problems (Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire; SDQ), and wellbeing (Parent-rated Life Orientation Test of children; PLOT and Positive-Mental-Health Scale; PMH)...
2023: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37809031/the-spectra-study-validating-a-new-memory-training-program-based-on-the-episodic-specificity-induction-to-promote-transfer-in-older-adults
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rudy Purkart, Preslava Aleksieva, Samira Mellah, Gloria Leblond-Baccichet, Sylvie Belleville
Some complex cognitive activities impacted by aging (future thinking, problem-solving, creative thinking) have been shown to rely on episodic retrieval, suggesting that cognitive interventions aiming to improve retrieval have the potential to induce transfer effects to these activities. Prior studies have shown that a brief one-session technique called Episodic Specificity Induction (ESI) can transiently improve episodic retrieval and induce transfer effects to complex tasks that rely on episodic retrieval in older adults...
2023: Journal of Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37807910/future-thinking-and-anticipatory-pleasure-in-adolescents-with-major-depression-association-with-depression-symptoms-and-executive-functions
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pooja M Lakshmi, M Thomas Kishore, Bangalore N Roopesh, Preeti Jacob, Danielle Rusanov, David J Hallford
OBJECTIVE: Impairments in episodic future thinking and anticipatory pleasure were noted to explain the depressive symptoms in adults however similar studies are not there in adolescents. This study examined whether there are impairments in episodic future thinking and anticipatory pleasure in clinically-depressed adolescents as compared to non-depressed adolescents, and their association with depression when controlled for executive functions and anxiety symptoms among the depressed adolescents...
October 9, 2023: Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37736284/shifting-episodic-prediction-with-online-cognitive-bias-modification-a-randomized-controlled-trial
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jeremy W Eberle, Mehdi Boukhechba, Jianhui Sun, Diheng Zhang, Daniel H Funk, Laura E Barnes, Bethany A Teachman
Negative future thinking pervades emotional disorders. This hybrid efficacy-effectiveness trial tested a four-session, scalable online cognitive bias modification program for training more positive episodic prediction. 958 adults (73.3% female, 86.5% White, 83.4% from United States) were randomized to positive conditions with ambiguous future scenarios that ended positively, 50/50 conditions that ended positively or negatively, or a control condition with neutral scenarios. As hypothesized (preregistration: https://osf...
September 2023: Clinical Psychological Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37725751/-memories-of-the-future-a-narrative-literature-review-of-episodic-future-thinking
#32
REVIEW
Patricia Lajko, Anita Must
In recent years, the question of how we can grasp the ability to plan future events has come to the forefront in light of the retrieval of personal memories from the past. If episodic memory is responsible for envisioning future events, there appears to be an overlap between autobiographical memory and imagining the future. The aim of this current narrative literature review is to present existing theories and research findings, thereby facilitating the development of an organizational framework necessary for the unified investigation of future thinking...
September 2023: Neuropsychopharmacologia Hungarica
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37707459/discounting-and-the-portfolio-of-desires
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter R Killeen
The additive utility theory of discounting is extended to probability and commodity discounting. Because the utility of a good and the disutility of its delay combine additively, increases in the utility of a good offset the disutility of its delay: Increasing the former slows the apparent discount even with the latter, time-disutility, remaining invariant, giving the magnitude effect. Conjoint measurement showed the subjective value of money to be a logarithmic function of its amount, and subjective probability-the probability weighting function-to be Prelec's (1998)...
October 2023: Psychological Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37562654/envisioning-the-future-an-ale-meta-analysis-on-neural-correlates-of-future-thinking-prospective-memory-and-delay-discounting
#34
REVIEW
Giorgia Cona, Paola Santacesaria, Cristina Scarpazza
Our representations of the future are processed in the service of several different cognitive functions, including episodic future thinking, prospective memory, and temporal discounting. The present meta-analysis used the Activation Likelihood Estimation method to understand whether there is a core network underlying future-oriented cognition and to identify the specific brain regions that support future-related processes in each function. Following the PRISMA guidelines, a total of 24, 19, and 27 neuroimaging studies were included for future thinking, prospective memory, and temporal discounting, respectively...
August 8, 2023: Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37556963/understanding-and-predicting-future-relapse-in-depression-from-resting-state-functional-connectivity-and-self-referential-processing
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rozemarijn S van Kleef, Pallavi Kaushik, Marlijn Besten, Jan-Bernard C Marsman, Claudi L H Bockting, Marieke van Vugt, André Aleman, Marie-José van Tol
BACKGROUND: The recurrent nature of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) asks for a better understanding of mechanisms underlying relapse. Previously, self-referential processing abnormalities have been linked to vulnerability for relapse. We investigated whether abnormalities in self-referential cognitions and functioning of associated brain-networks persist upon remission and predict relapse. METHODS: Remitted recurrent MDD patients (n = 48) and never-depressed controls (n = 23) underwent resting-state fMRI scanning at baseline and were additionally assessed for their implicit depressed self-associations and ruminative behaviour...
July 26, 2023: Journal of Psychiatric Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37535609/episodic-future-thinking-in-type-2-diabetes-further-development-and-validation-of-the-health-information-thinking-control-for-clinical-trials
#36
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Jeremiah M Brown, Warren K Bickel, Leonard H Epstein, Jeffrey S Stein
Episodic Future Thinking (EFT) reduces delay discounting and may have the potential as a clinical tool to increase the likelihood of health-promoting behaviors. However, evaluations of EFT in clinical settings require control conditions that match the effort and frequency of cue generation, as well as participants' expectations of improvement. The Health Information Thinking (HIT) control addresses these issues, but how this control affects delay discounting in individuals with diabetes and obesity when utilizing diabetes-management specific health-information vignettes is unknown...
2023: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37505145/the-use-of-episodic-future-thinking-in-people-with-overweight-or-obesity-a-scoping-review
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yuchen Liu, Sufang Huang, Danni Feng, Xiaorong Lang, Quan Wang, Kexin Zhang
A growing number of studies have applied Episodic Future Thinking (EFT) to cognitive interventions in specific population. However, The variability in study populations may lead to inconsistent results and present challenges in the optimal intervention approach and scope of adaptation. This scoping review aimed to identify and describe specific methods, considerations, and results collected and reported in randomized controlled trials of EFT applied to diet and weight management in people with overweight or obesity...
July 28, 2023: Medicine (Baltimore)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37494423/do-executive-functions-differentiate-iranian-children-with-attention-deficit-hyperactivity-disorder-with-and-without-comorbid-obesity
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kamal Parhoon, Stephen L Aita, Azad Mohammadi, Robert M Roth
OBJECTIVE: To compare multiple dimensions of executive function between children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) with and without comorbid obesity. METHOD: Participants were 90 Iranian children (ages 8-13, 50% female) who were equally dispersed across three study groups: typically developing (TD), ADHD with obesity (ADHD+O), and ADHD without obesity (ADHD-O). Study participants were administered a comprehensive battery of Iranian-adapted "cool" executive function tasks including Digit Span from the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Fifth Edition (WISC-V), Victoria Stroop Test (VST), Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST), Tower of London, and dot-probe task (i...
July 25, 2023: Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology: the Official Journal of the National Academy of Neuropsychologists
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37482699/vividness-of-imagery-and-affective-response-to-episodic-memories-and-episodic-future-thoughts-a-systematic-review-and-meta-analysis
#39
REVIEW
Charlotte Morton, Andrew K MacLeod
Recalling personal past events and imagining personal future events are closely linked, yet also show differences. It has been claimed that episodic future thinking produces stronger intensity of in-the-moment affect than does recalling episodic memories [Schubert, T., Eloo, R., Scharfen, J., & Morina, N. (2020). How imagining personal future scenarios influences affect: Systematic review and meta-analysis. Clinical Psychology Review , 75 , 101811. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cpr.2019.101811]. In contrast, the literature indicates that memories are experienced more vividly than are episodic future thoughts, a quality that would be expected to produce a stronger rather than a weaker affective response...
July 23, 2023: Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37454161/the-benefits-of-mind-wandering-on-a-naturalistic-prospective-memory-task
#40
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
J C Girardeau, R Ledru, A Gaston-Bellegarde, P Blondé, M Sperduti, P Piolino
Mind wandering (MW) occurs when our attention spontaneously shifts from the task at hand to inner thoughts. MW is often future-oriented and may help people remember to carry out their planned actions (Prospective Memory, PM). Past-oriented MW might also play a critical role in boosting PM performance. Sixty participants learned 24 PM items and recalled them during an immersive virtual walk in a town. The items were divided into event-based-EB and time-based-TB. During the PM retention phase, participants were randomly assigned to a high or a low cognitive load condition, in order to manipulate MW frequency...
July 15, 2023: Scientific Reports
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