The objective of this research is to continue study of a new, integrative theory of imagery and motion, with particular emphasis on its implications for health and performance, and more specifically for the psychopathology of anxiety. The deduced experimental series aims to elucidate the conditions under which affective reactions are evoked by symbolic stimuli, to compare fear responses induced through imagery with those prompted by objective stimuli, to compare fear responses induced through imagery with those prompted by objectives stimuli, to show how differences in the organizations of image representations in memory and the patient's capacity for image generation relate to differences in the anxiety disorders, and to suggest how emotional imagery can serve as a vehicle for emotional change. The proposed experiments examine the psychophysiology of memory retrieval for emotionally evocative text, assessing the relevant subject, content, attentional, and processing mode variables which may define the nature of emotional memory, and which are held to be significant parameters of clinical anxiety. Thus, the project first emphasizes basic research in the validation of a working theory, and secondly applied research, as the implications of the theory lead to specific predictions for the psychopathology of anxiety, its differential diagnosis and therapy prognosis.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Method to Extend Research in Time (MERIT) Award (R37)
Project #
5R37MH037757-07
Application #
3486590
Study Section
Psychopathology and Clinical Biology Research Review Committee (PCB)
Project Start
1982-07-01
Project End
1992-06-30
Budget Start
1988-07-01
Budget End
1989-06-30
Support Year
7
Fiscal Year
1988
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Florida
Department
Type
Sch Allied Health Professions
DUNS #
073130411
City
Gainesville
State
FL
Country
United States
Zip Code
32611
Lang, Peter J; Davis, Michael (2006) Emotion, motivation, and the brain: reflex foundations in animal and human research. Prog Brain Res 156:3-29
Smith, J Carson; Bradley, Margaret M; Lang, Peter J (2005) State anxiety and affective physiology: effects of sustained exposure to affective pictures. Biol Psychol 69:247-60
Bradley, Margaret M; Moulder, Brad; Lang, Peter J (2005) When good things go bad: the reflex physiology of defense. Psychol Sci 16:468-73
Sabatinelli, Dean; Flaisch, Tobias; Bradley, Margaret M et al. (2004) Affective picture perception: gender differences in visual cortex? Neuroreport 15:1109-12
Cuthbert, Bruce N; Lang, Peter J; Strauss, Cyd et al. (2003) The psychophysiology of anxiety disorder: fear memory imagery. Psychophysiology 40:407-22
Shapira, Nathan A; Liu, Yijun; He, Alex G et al. (2003) Brain activation by disgust-inducing pictures in obsessive-compulsive disorder. Biol Psychiatry 54:751-6
Bradley, Margaret M; Sabatinelli, Dean; Lang, Peter J et al. (2003) Activation of the visual cortex in motivated attention. Behav Neurosci 117:369-80
Sloan, Denise M; Bradley, Margaret M; Dimoulas, Eleni et al. (2002) Looking at facial expressions: dysphoria and facial EMG. Biol Psychol 60:79-90
Junghofer, M; Bradley, M M; Elbert, T R et al. (2001) Fleeting images: a new look at early emotion discrimination. Psychophysiology 38:175-8
Codispoti, M; Bradley, M M; Lang, P J (2001) Affective reactions to briefly presented pictures. Psychophysiology 38:474-8

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