Positive Emotion Disturbance and Psychological Health (1 CE)
SPA E-Learning Center | Convention Keynotes
Abstract
Emotions are powerful processes that enable us to respond adaptively to life’s triumphs and challenges. A longstanding assumption has been that positive emotions are predominantly adaptive relative to negative emotions. This talk will provide an overview of our research that strives to shift these theoretical and empirical tides to illuminate the nature of, and mechanisms underlying, positive emotion disturbance and its risk for psychopathology onset and severity. This guiding framework will be used to review supportive evidence we’ve collected utilizing a multi-modal clinical-affective science approach outlining key themes in positive emotion difficulties in individuals at risk for, and diagnosed with, affective disorders. Recent findings will be discussed including multi-site studies examining changes in affective trajectories among a large sample of diverse young adults as well as international partnerships examining cross-cultural variation in positive emotion difficulties. Implications will be discussed for considering the importance of positive emotion in elucidating mood health and its translational relevance.
Speaker
June Gruber | University of Colorado Boulder
Goals & Objectives
- Describe the nature of positive emotion disturbance and its risk for psychopathology onset and severity.
- Discuss the importance of positive emotion in elucidating mood health and its translational relevance.