Affective Neuroscience by Dr. Jaak Panskepp Provides the most up - to - date information about the brain - operating systems that organize the fundamental emotional tendencies of all mammals.
Not exact matches
The study was led
by Thomas Denson of the University of New South Wales in Australia in the journal Cognitive,
Affective, & Behavioral
Neuroscience which is an official journal of the Psychonomic Society and is published
by Springer.
A study
by researchers from the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology &
Neuroscience (IoPPN) at King's College London has shown that mood instability occurs in a wide range of mental disorders and is not exclusive to
affective conditions such as depression, bipolar disorder and anxiety disorder.
University of Wisconsin researchers are in the vanguard of exploring the uncharted frontier that neuroscientist Richard Davidson has dubbed
affective neuroscience — the study of how emotion is generated
by the brain.
For the first time ever, a team of medical researchers led
by Richard Davidson, director of the Laboratory for
Affective Neuroscience at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, showed that meditation activates an area of the brain associated with positive emotions.
She is currently a clinical and research post-doctoral fellow at the Laboratory for Translational and
Affective Neuroscience, directed
by Diego A. Pizzagalli, PhD.
This variety of themes, models and techniques makes this laboratory a kind of unique environment that, also thanks to its link with the International PhD Program in Cognitive, Social and
affective Neuroscience, is populated
by scholars with different historical and geographical background.
Their research has been influenced
by the work of Jaak Panksepp, a neuroscientist who helped launch the scientific discipline called
affective neuroscience.
In the first half of the study (soon to be published in Social Cognitive and
Affective Neuroscience) the brain activity of fifteen canines was monitored
by researchers.
Dr. Anderson is the Canada Research Chair in
Affective Neuroscience and recipient of a Templeton Positive
Neuroscience award spearheaded
by the University of Pennsylvania Positive Psychology Center for his research on the neural and genetic bases of positivity and resilience.
Developed
by Dr. Diana Fosha, author of The Transforming Power of Affect, it has roots in and resonances with many disciplines — among them attachment theory,
affective neuroscience, body - focused approaches, and transformational studies.
Developed
by Dr. Diana Fosha, AEDP has roots in attachment theory,
affective neuroscience, body - focused approaches, and transformational studies.
The Archeology of Mind
by Dr. Jaak Panskepp Presents an
affective neuroscience approach — which takes into consideration basic mental processes, brain functions, and emotional behaviors that all mammals share — to locate the neural mechanisms of emotional expression.
The Healing Power of Emotion:
Affective Neuroscience, Development & Clinical Practice
By Diana Fosha, Daniel J. Siegel & Marion Solomon (2009).
This innovative method was developed
by Dr. Diana Fosha and has roots in many disciplines, such as attachment theory,
affective neuroscience, and body - focused approaches.
My work is informed
by Accelerated Experiential Dynamic Psychotherapy, an integrative model of psychotherapy that blends attachment theory,
affective neuroscience, somatic approaches and short - term dynamic psychotherapies to heal trauma, awaken your most authentic self, and increase your sense of connection with others.