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      Compassion-based emotion regulation up-regulates experienced positive affect and associated neural networks.

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          Abstract

          Emotion regulation research has primarily focused on techniques that attenuate or modulate the impact of emotional stimuli. Recent evidence suggests that this mode regulation can be problematic in the context of regulation of emotion elicited by the suffering of others, resulting in reduced emotional connectedness. Here, we investigated the effects of an alternative emotion regulation technique based on the up-regulation of positive affect via Compassion-meditation on experiential and neural affective responses to depictions of individuals in distress, and compared these with the established emotion regulation strategy of Reappraisal. Using fMRI, we scanned 15 expert practitioners of Compassion-meditation either passively viewing, or using Compassion-meditation or Reappraisal to modulate their emotional reactions to film clips depicting people in distress. Both strategies effectively, but differentially regulated experienced affect, with Compassion primarily increasing positive and Reappraisal primarily decreasing negative affect. Imaging results showed that Compassion, relative to both passive-viewing and Reappraisal increased activation in regions involved in affiliation, positive affect and reward processing including ventral striatum and medial orbitfrontal cortex. This network was shown to be active prior to stimulus presentation, suggesting that the regulatory mechanism of Compassion is the stimulus-independent endogenous generation of positive affect.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci
          Social cognitive and affective neuroscience
          Oxford University Press (OUP)
          1749-5024
          1749-5016
          Sep 2015
          : 10
          : 9
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Social Neuroscience, Max-Planck-Institute of Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany engen@cbs.mpg.de.
          [2 ] Department of Social Neuroscience, Max-Planck-Institute of Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany.
          Article
          nsv008
          10.1093/scan/nsv008
          4560943
          25698699
          63c4aafe-83b6-4eca-baee-8754e5cec1e6
          History

          fMRI,reappraisal,compassion,emotion regulation
          fMRI, reappraisal, compassion, emotion regulation

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