Barry Sheppard added missing citations to bibliography  over 8 years ago

Commit id: ef6eb0ecb766b69024431751023d6306579365b4

deletions | additions      

       

pages = {169--183},  file = {Hofmann et al_2010_The effect of mindfulness-based therapy on anxiety and depression.pdf:/Users/barrysheppard/Dropbox/Apps/Zotero/Hofmann et al_2010_The effect of mindfulness-based therapy on anxiety and depression.pdf:application/pdf},  }  @article{way_dispositional_2010,  title = {{Dispositional mindfulness and depressive symptomatology: {Correlations} with limbic and self-referential neural activity during rest}},  volume = {10},  copyright = {(c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved},  issn = {1931-1516(Electronic);1528-3542(Print)},  shorttitle = {Dispositional mindfulness and depressive symptomatology},  doi = {10.1037/a0018312},  abstract = {To better understand the relationship between mindfulness and depression, we studied normal young adults (n = 27) who completed measures of dispositional mindfulness and depressive symptomatology, which were then correlated with (a) rest: resting neural activity during passive viewing of a fixation cross, relative to a simple goal-directed task (shape-matching); and (b) reactivity: neural reactivity during viewing of negative emotional faces, relative to the same shape-matching task. Dispositional mindfulness was negatively correlated with resting activity in self-referential processing areas, whereas depressive symptomatology was positively correlated with resting activity in similar areas. In addition, dispositional mindfulness was negatively correlated with resting activity in the amygdala, bilaterally, whereas depressive symptomatology was positively correlated with activity in the right amygdala. Similarly, when viewing emotional faces, amygdala reactivity was positively correlated with depressive symptomatology and negatively correlated with dispositional mindfulness, an effect that was largely attributable to differences in resting activity. These findings indicate that mindfulness is associated with intrinsic neural activity and that changes in resting amygdala activity could be a potential mechanism by which mindfulness-based depression treatments elicit therapeutic improvement.},  number = {1},  journal = {Emotion},  author = {Way, Baldwin M. and David, J. and Eisenberger, Naomi I. and Lieberman, Matthew D.},  year = {2010},  keywords = {*Major Depression, *Mindfulness, *Neurotransmission, amygdala, emotions},  pages = {12--24},  file = {APA PsycNET Snapshot:/Users/barrysheppard/Library/Application Support/Zotero/Profiles/zg495uy0.default/zotero/storage/HCP7ISQ3/index.html:text/html;Way et al_2010_Dispositional mindfulness and depressive symptomatology.pdf:/Users/barrysheppard/Dropbox/Apps/Zotero/Way et al_2010_Dispositional mindfulness and depressive symptomatology.pdf:application/pdf},  }