80 results on '"Di Simplicio M"'
Search Results
2. Approach-avoidance biases to self-harm cues in young people with self-harm
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Rodrigues, R., Mehesz, E.Z., Lingford-Hughes, A., and Di Simplicio, M.
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- 2023
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3. Exploring Temporal Relationships Between Anxiety, Mood and Mental Imagery in Patients With Bipolar Disorder: A Network Analysis.
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van den Berg, K. C., ten Bloemendal, E., Hendrickson, A. T., Di Simplicio, M., Voncken, M., Aalbers, G., and Keijsers, G. P. J.
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BIPOLAR disorder ,SECONDARY analysis ,ANXIETY ,PSYCHOEDUCATION ,VISUALIZATION ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,MANIA ,COGNITIVE therapy ,GROUP process ,MENTAL depression - Abstract
Introduction: Bipolar disorder is a severe mental health problem with limited treatment success. There is a call for improving interventions, requiring an increased understanding of factors driving mood instability. One promising avenue is to study temporal associations between factors that appear relevant according to the emotional amplifier model of Holmes are changes in mood, anxiety and mental imagery. Methods: The current study used data from a recent RCT for a secondary analysis which applied a network analysis approach to explore temporal associations between weekly measurements of mania, depression, anxiety and mental imagery measured during 32 weeks in two randomised groups (N = 55) receiving either imagery‐focused cognitive therapy (ImCT) or group psychoeducation (PE). Results: Both negative intrusive mental imagery and anxiety appeared central in the network analyses, driving changes in both mania and depression, but only in the PE group. In the ImCT group, only anxiety was driving changes in mania and depression. Conclusion: Although exploratory, findings suggest that prior increases in anxiety and negative intrusive mental imagery might be associated with subsequent increases in depression and mania symptoms in patients with bipolar disorder. Anxiety might in turn increase negative intrusive imagery and associated negative emotions. Although more research is needed, results are in line with the emotional amplifier model and stress that future interventions with a focus on anxiety and imagery might help to improve psychosocial therapies for patients with bipolar disorder. In addition, this study suggests that a network approach is a helpful and feasible way to study mood instability, anxiety and mental imagery to increase our understanding of mechanisms underpinning mood instability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. What's in the mind's eye of individuals with bipolar disorders: an exploration of the content and characteristics of mental images in different thymic phases.
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M'Bailara, K., Echegaray, F., and Di Simplicio, M.
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Background: Mental imagery, or 'seeing with the mind's eye' (Kosslyn et al. 2001), provokes strong emotional responses (Ji et al., 2016). To date, there is a lack of data on the content and clinical characteristics (e.g. vividness, likelihood, emotional effects) of spontaneous mental images (MI) in people with bipolar disorder (BD) according to their thymic states. Aim: The current study sought to assess the characteristics associated with the contents of MI in people with BD. Method: Forty-two euthymic individuals diagnosed with BD (American Psychiatric Association, 2013) were asked to self-report their MI during depression, (hypo)mania and euthymia. Participants also rated levels of vividness, likelihood and emotional activation related to MI (i.e. valence, arousal, type of emotion). Results: The contents of the MI revealed phenomenological aspects of BD. Different themes were associated with each thymic phase. In (hypo)mania and in euthymia, the mental images were assessed as being as vivid as probable (p >.05). (Hypo)manic and euthymic-related MI activated more pleasure than displeasure (p <.001) and were mainly associated with joy. In depression, MI were assessed as more vivid than likely (p <.05). In depression, MI activated more displeasure than pleasure (p <.0001) and induced mainly sadness. Discussion: Overall, a congruence between the contents of images and the three thymic phases was found. The content of the MI was related to self-reported emotional effects that were congruent with the thymic phases concerned. The results add new clinical information for the use of imagery-based cognitive therapy in individuals with BD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Attentional processing biases in young people with binging/purging behaviour
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Freccero, A., Burmester, V., Rodrigues, R., Gallucci, A., Nicholls, D., and Di Simplicio, M.
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- 2023
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6. Mental imagery and mood instability: a case series of imagery-focused cognitive therapy for bipolar disorder
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Di Simplicio, M, Hales, S, Blackwell, S, Young, K, Lau-Zhu, A, Mitchell, H, Goodwin, G, and Holmes, E A
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- 2015
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7. Short-term antidepressant administration reduces negative self-referential processing in the medial prefrontal cortex in subjects at risk for depression
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Di Simplicio, M, Norbury, R, and Harmer, C J
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- 2012
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8. Paradoxical effects of short-term antidepressant treatment in fMRI emotional processing models in volunteers with high neuroticism
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Di Simplicio, M., Norbury, R., Reinecke, A., and Harmer, C. J.
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- 2014
9. Decreased heart rate variability during emotion regulation in subjects at risk for psychopathology
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Di Simplicio, M., Costoloni, G., Western, D., Hanson, B., Taggart, P., and Harmer, C. J.
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- 2012
10. P.3.04 Antidepressant treatment modulates prefrontal cortex response to threatening cues in subjects at risk for depression
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Di Simplicio, M., Norbury, R., and Harmer, C.J.
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- 2009
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11. Intérêt de considérer la comorbidité dans la compréhension des dysfonctionnements émotionnels chez des sujets ayant un trouble bipolaire en phase de normothymie
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M’Bailara, K., Petit, F., and Di Simplicio, M.
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- 2019
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12. P.1.c.020 “Look me in the face!”: short-term SSRI administration reverts avoidant ocular face exploration in subjects at risk for psychopathology
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Di Simplicio, M., Doallo, S., Costoloni, G., Rohenkohl, G., Nobre, A.C., and Harmer, C.J.
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- 2012
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13. Oxytocin enhances processing of positive versus negative emotional information in healthy male volunteers.
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Di Simplicio, M., Massey-Chase, R., Cowen, P. J., and Harmer, C. J.
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OXYTOCIN , *VOLUNTEER service , *PLACEBOS , *ANTIDEPRESSANTS , *CLINICAL psychology , *MEN'S health - Abstract
Animal studies have shown the role of oxytocin in affiliation and attachment, and recent evidence suggests that oxytocin is also involved in human models of approach behaviour, possibly by modulating the processing of emotionally valenced stimuli. Although oxytocin administration has been reported to decrease neural responses to facial emotional information, the effects on a wider range of behavioural measures of emotional processing shown to be sensitive to antidepressant manipulation have not been examined. The aim of this study was to investigate whether intranasally administered oxytocin affects the processing of positive and negative affective information in healthy male volunteers across tasks measuring attention, perception and memory. Twenty-nine male healthy volunteers were randomly allocated to receive a single dose of oxytocin nasal spray (24 UI) or placebo. 50 min later, participants completed a battery of psychological tests measuring emotional processing. A single dose of intranasally administered oxytocin slowed reaction time to correctly identify fearful facial expressions and reduced the misclassification of positive emotions as negative ones. These effects occurred in the absence of significant differences in subjective ratings of mood and anxiety. These results suggest that oxytocin modulates emotion processing in healthy male volunteers. This action may contribute to the emerging role of the neuropeptide in promoting affiliative and approach behaviours by reducing the salience of potentially ambiguous and threatening social stimuli. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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14. S.07.03 Antidepressant treatment modulates neural responses to self-referential words in subjects with high neuroticism
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Di Simplicio, M., Norbury, R., and Harmer, C.J.
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- 2010
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15. P.3.005 Antidepressant treatment modulates neural responses to self-referential words in subjects with high neuroticism
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Di Simplicio, M., Norbury, R., and Harmer, C.J.
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- 2010
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16. P.2.005 Testing the role of serotonin in the appraisal of romantic relationships in healthy adults: implications for depression
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Bilderbeck, A.C., McCabe, C., McGlone, F., Wakeley, J., Di Simplicio, M., Godlewska, B., Harris, T., Cowen, P.J., and Rogers, R.D.
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- 2010
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17. P.1.g.015 Differential effects of personality trait on facial expression recognition. An repetitive TMS investigation
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Di Simplicio, M., Falzarano, V., De Capua, A., and Rossi, S.
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- 2008
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18. Understanding the influence of suicide bereavement on the cognitive availability of suicide: Qualitative interview study of UK adults.
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Jones P, Quayle KE, Kamboj SK, Di Simplicio M, and Pitman A
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Background: People bereaved by suicide are at increased risk of suicide. Potential explanations include changes in the cognitive availability of suicide after suicide bereavement, but this has been under-investigated. This study aimed to investigate how suicide bereavement influences thoughts about suicide, including methods considered., Method: We interviewed 20 UK-based adultswho reported having been preoccupied by the suicide of a close contact, analyzing qualitative data using reflexive thematic analysis., Results: We identified four main themes: divergent changes in views about suicide as an option; impact of the method used on consideration of own potential method of suicide (including an aversion to the same method); experience of suicidal ideation as a means of understanding the deceased's state of mind; and thoughts related to reunion with the deceased., Conclusions: Our findings suggest that the trauma of exposure to a close contact's suicide can modify the cognitive availability of suicide in divergent ways, including suicide being perceived as a more or less acceptable option, and a tension between the two. These insights assist clinicians in sensitive exploration of suicide bereavement and in risk mitigation. They suggest revisions to existing models of cognitive availability and the potential for psychological interventions that modify the cognitive availability of suicide., (© 2024 The Author(s). Suicide and Life‐Threatening Behavior published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Association of Suicidology.)
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- 2024
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19. Reward processing in young people with self-harm behaviour.
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Yavuz E, Rodrigues R, Pascual Sanchez A, Lingford-Hughes A, and Di Simplicio M
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Twenty percent of young people report a lifetime presence of self-harm (SH) behaviour, associated with negative health and functional outcomes. Understanding the underlying cognitive mechanisms is needed to develop targeted early interventions. Reward processing biases may underlie SH, aligning with accounts of the behaviour acquiring "addictive" characteristics. However, the specific nature of such biases remains unclear, particularly its relationship with negative affect (NA) that frequently triggers SH. In Study 1, we compared young people (aged 16-25) with SH to a group with NA but no SH history and a healthy control group on performance of a novel Incentive Delay Task (IDT), with SH-related (SH trials), positive social (social trials) or monetary images (money trials) as stimuli. In Study 2, a different sample of SH and HC participants completed the same IDT following NA induction via an online Trier Social Stress Test. For both studies, we hypothesised faster and more correct responses in the SH group than control groups on SH trials. Contradicting our hypothesis, there were no significant between-group differences in IDT performance on SH, social and money trials in either study. Certain SH characteristics (positive reinforcement, SH mental imagery, urge) were significantly correlated with better performance on SH trials in SH participants. Thus, broadly SH behaviour may not be underpinned by motivational biases towards SH-related cues or naturalistic rewards. Future studies should clarify whether incentivisation of SH-related cues instead explains individual differences in SH behaviour and its relation with treatment and prognosis., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors of this article declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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20. Impact of mobile phones and wireless devices use on children and adolescents' mental health: a systematic review.
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Girela-Serrano BM, Spiers ADV, Ruotong L, Gangadia S, Toledano MB, and Di Simplicio M
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- Humans, Adolescent, Child, COVID-19 psychology, Female, Wireless Technology, Male, Cell Phone, Mental Health
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Growing use of mobiles phones (MP) and other wireless devices (WD) has raised concerns about their possible effects on children and adolescents' wellbeing. Understanding whether these technologies affect children and adolescents' mental health in positive or detrimental ways has become more urgent following further increase in use since the COVID-19 outbreak. To review the empirical evidence on associations between use of MP/WD and mental health in children and adolescents. A systematic review of literature was carried out on Medline, Embase and PsycINFO for studies published prior to July 15th 2019, PROSPERO ID: CRD42019146750. 25 observational studies published between January 1st 2011 and 2019 were reviewed (ten were cohort studies, 15 were cross-sectional). Overall estimated participant mean age and proportion female were 14.6 years and 47%, respectively. Substantial between-study heterogeneity in design and measurement of MP/WD usage and mental health outcomes limited our ability to infer general conclusions. Observed effects differed depending on time and type of MP/WD usage. We found suggestive but limited evidence that greater use of MP/WD may be associated with poorer mental health in children and adolescents. Risk of bias was rated as 'high' for 16 studies, 'moderate' for five studies and 'low' for four studies. More high-quality longitudinal studies and mechanistic research are needed to clarify the role of sleep and of type of MP/WD use (e.g. social media) on mental health trajectories in children and adolescents., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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21. Severe COVID anxiety among adults in the United Kingdom: cohort study and nested feasibility trial.
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Crawford MJ, King JD, McQuaid A, Bassett P, Leeson VC, Tella O, Di Simplicio M, Tyrer P, Tyrer H, Watt RG, and Barnicot K
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Humans, Anxiety therapy, Cohort Studies, Feasibility Studies, United Kingdom epidemiology, COVID-19
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Background: People with severe COVID anxiety have poor mental health and impaired functioning, but the course of severe COVID anxiety is unknown and the quality of evidence on the acceptability and impact of psychological interventions is low., Methods: A quantitative cohort study with a nested feasibility trial. Potential participants aged 18 and over, living in the UK with severe COVID anxiety, were recruited online and from primary care services. We examined levels of COVID anxiety in the six months after recruitment, and factors that influenced this, using linear regression. Those scoring above 20 on the short Health Anxiety Inventory were invited to participate in a feasibility trial of remotely delivered Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Health Anxiety (CBT-HA). Exclusion criteria were recent COVID-19, current self-isolation, or current receipt of psychological treatment. Key outcomes for the feasibility trial were the level of uptake of CBT-HA and the rate of follow-up., Results: 204 (70.2%) of 285 people who took part in the cohort study completed the six month follow-up, for whom levels of COVID anxiety fell from 12.4 at baseline to 6.8 at six months (difference = -5.5, 95% CI = -6.0 to -4.9). Reductions in COVID anxiety were lower among older people, those living with a vulnerable person, those with lower baseline COVID anxiety, and those with higher levels of generalised anxiety and health anxiety at baseline. 36 (90%) of 40 participants enrolled in the nested feasibility trial were followed up at six months. 17 (80.9%) of 21 people in the active arm of the trial received four or more sessions of CBT-HA. We found improved mental health and social functioning among those in the active, but not the control arm of the trial (Mean difference in total score on the Work and Social Adjustment Scale between baseline and follow up, was 9.7 (95% CI = 5.8-13.6) among those in the active, and 1.0 (95% C.I. = -4.6 to 6.6) among those in the control arm of the trial., Conclusions: While the mental health of people with severe COVID anxiety appears to improve over time, many continue to experience high levels of anxiety and poor social functioning. Health anxiety is highly prevalent among people with severe COVID anxiety and may provide a target for psychological treatment., Trial Registration: Retrospectively registered at ISRCTN14973494 on 09/09/2021., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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22. What's in the mind's eye of individuals with bipolar disorders: an exploration of the content and characteristics of mental images in different thymic phases.
- Author
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M'Bailara K, Echegaray F, and Di Simplicio M
- Abstract
Background: Mental imagery, or 'seeing with the mind's eye' (Kosslyn et al . ), provokes strong emotional responses (Ji et al ., ). To date, there is a lack of data on the content and clinical characteristics (e.g. vividness, likelihood, emotional effects) of spontaneous mental images (MI) in people with bipolar disorder (BD) according to their thymic states., Aim: The current study sought to assess the characteristics associated with the contents of MI in people with BD., Method: Forty-two euthymic individuals diagnosed with BD (American Psychiatric Association, ) were asked to self-report their MI during depression, (hypo)mania and euthymia. Participants also rated levels of vividness, likelihood and emotional activation related to MI (i.e. valence, arousal, type of emotion)., Results: The contents of the MI revealed phenomenological aspects of BD. Different themes were associated with each thymic phase. In (hypo)mania and in euthymia, the mental images were assessed as being as vivid as probable ( p >.05). (Hypo)manic and euthymic-related MI activated more pleasure than displeasure ( p <.001) and were mainly associated with joy. In depression, MI were assessed as more vivid than likely ( p <.05). In depression, MI activated more displeasure than pleasure ( p <.0001) and induced mainly sadness., Discussion: Overall, a congruence between the contents of images and the three thymic phases was found. The content of the MI was related to self-reported emotional effects that were congruent with the thymic phases concerned. The results add new clinical information for the use of imagery-based cognitive therapy in individuals with BD.
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- 2023
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23. Exploring the phenomenon of intrusive mental imagery after suicide bereavement: A qualitative interview study in a British sample.
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Quayle K, Jones P, Di Simplicio M, Kamboj S, and Pitman A
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- Adult, Humans, Grief, Imagery, Psychotherapy, Qualitative Research, Bereavement, Suicide
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Introduction: Each year an estimated 48 million people are bereaved by suicide internationally. Following traumatic events, experiencing intrusive mental imagery relating to the trauma is not uncommon. This phenomenological study aimed to explore the nature, experience and impact of intrusive mental imagery after suicide bereavement., Methods: Semi-structured interview transcripts with 18 adults bereaved by the suicide of a close contact were analysed using thematic analysis to explore patterns and themes within the data, with particular consideration of the content of images, how people experience and relate to the imagery, and the impact that the imagery has on the bereaved., Results: Thematic analysis identified common characteristics in the experience of intrusive mental imagery following suicide loss, summarised under two main themes capturing: 1) the descriptive characteristics and 2) the emotional experience of intrusive mental imagery following suicide loss. The majority of participants found the experience of intrusive imagery distressing, but most also described positive aspects, including help in making sense of the death and retaining memories of the deceased., Conclusion: Findings inform our understanding of the distressing experience of intrusive imagery after suicide loss, also revealing perceived value in processing the death., Competing Interests: AP is a patron of the Support After Suicide Partnership; MDS has co-authored books and delivers workshops on imagery-based therapy; all authors state that they have no other conflicts of interest. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials. All transcripts of interview recordings have been pseudonymised and de-identified, and have been securely archived in the UCL Data Safe Haven in perpetuity. Transcripts have had all identifiers removed and are labelled only by age, gender, ethnicity and time since bereavement. A condition of our ethics approval, given the sensitive nature of the data, was that transcripts will only be accessible for analysis by members of the UCL research team. Applications to join the research team as an honorary researcher will be considered on formal application setting out methodological approach and justification for the research study. The UCL Research Ethics Committee approval for this study does not permit us to make the data accessible in an open access form given the potential for deidentification based on factors in the history recounted., (Copyright: © 2023 Quayle et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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24. Mindcraft, a Mobile Mental Health Monitoring Platform for Children and Young People: Development and Acceptability Pilot Study.
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Kadirvelu B, Bellido Bel T, Wu X, Burmester V, Ananth S, Cabral C C Branco B, Girela-Serrano B, Gledhill J, Di Simplicio M, Nicholls D, and Faisal AA
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Background: Children and young people's mental health is a growing public health concern, which is further exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Mobile health apps, particularly those using passive smartphone sensor data, present an opportunity to address this issue and support mental well-being., Objective: This study aimed to develop and evaluate a mobile mental health platform for children and young people, Mindcraft, which integrates passive sensor data monitoring with active self-reported updates through an engaging user interface to monitor their well-being., Methods: A user-centered design approach was used to develop Mindcraft, incorporating feedback from potential users. User acceptance testing was conducted with a group of 8 young people aged 15-17 years, followed by a pilot test with 39 secondary school students aged 14-18 years, which was conducted for a 2-week period., Results: Mindcraft showed encouraging user engagement and retention. Users reported that they found the app to be a friendly tool helping them to increase their emotional awareness and gain a better understanding of themselves. Over 90% of users (36/39, 92.5%) answered all active data questions on the days they used the app. Passive data collection facilitated the gathering of a broader range of well-being metrics over time, with minimal user intervention., Conclusions: The Mindcraft app has shown promising results in monitoring mental health symptoms and promoting user engagement among children and young people during its development and initial testing. The app's user-centered design, the focus on privacy and transparency, and a combination of active and passive data collection strategies have all contributed to its efficacy and receptiveness among the target demographic. By continuing to refine and expand the app, the Mindcraft platform has the potential to contribute meaningfully to the field of mental health care for young people., (©Balasundaram Kadirvelu, Teresa Bellido Bel, Xiaofei Wu, Victoria Burmester, Shayma Ananth, Bianca Cabral C C Branco, Braulio Girela-Serrano, Julia Gledhill, Martina Di Simplicio, Dasha Nicholls, A Aldo Faisal. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 26.06.2023.)
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- 2023
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25. Positive moods are all alike? Differential affect amplification effects of 'elated' versus 'calm' mental imagery in young adults reporting hypomanic-like experiences.
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Vannucci C, Bonsall MB, Di Simplicio M, Cairns A, Holmes EA, and Burnett Heyes S
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- Young Adult, Humans, Affect, Emotions, Imagery, Psychotherapy, Surveys and Questionnaires, Mania, Bipolar Disorder psychology
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Positive mood amplification is a hallmark of the bipolar disorder spectrum (BPDS). We need better understanding of cognitive mechanisms contributing to such elevated mood. Generation of vivid, emotionally compelling mental imagery is proposed to act as an 'emotional amplifier' in BPDS. We used a positive mental imagery generation paradigm to manipulate affect in a subclinical BPDS-relevant sample reporting high (n = 31) vs. low (n = 30) hypomanic-like experiences on the Mood Disorder Questionnaire (MDQ). Participants were randomized to an 'elated' or 'calm' mental imagery condition, rating their momentary affect four times across the experimental session. We hypothesized greater affect increase in the high (vs. low) MDQ group assigned to the elated (vs. calm) imagery generation condition. We further hypothesized that affect increase in the high MDQ group would be particularly apparent in the types of affect typically associated with (hypo)mania, i.e., suggestive of high activity levels. Mixed model and time-series analysis showed that for the high MDQ group, affect increased steeply and in a sustained manner over time in the 'elated' imagery condition, and more shallowly in 'calm'. The low-MDQ group did not show this amplification effect. Analysis of affect clusters showed high-MDQ mood amplification in the 'elated' imagery condition was most pronounced for active affective states. This experimental model of BPDS-relevant mood amplification shows evidence that positive mental imagery drives changes in affect in the high MDQ group in a targeted manner. Findings inform cognitive mechanisms of mood amplification, and spotlight prevention strategies targeting elated imagery, while potentially retaining calm imagery to preserve adaptive positive emotionality., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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26. Severe COVID-19 anxiety among adults in the UK: protocol for a cohort study and nested feasibility trial of modified cognitive-behavioural therapy for health anxiety.
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Crawford MJ, Leeson VC, McQuaid A, Samuel O, King JD, Di Simplicio M, Tyrer P, Tyrer H, Watt RG, and Barnicot K
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- Humans, Adult, Adolescent, Feasibility Studies, Cohort Studies, Anxiety, United Kingdom, COVID-19, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy methods
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Introduction: Some people are so anxious about COVID-19 that it impairs their functioning. However, little is known about the course of severe COVID-19 anxiety or what can be done to help people who experience it., Methods and Analysis: Cohort study with a nested feasibility trial with follow-up at 3 and 6 months. We recruited 306 people who were aged 18 and over, lived in the UK and had severe COVID-19 anxiety (indicated by a score of 9 or more on the Coronavirus Anxiety Scale (CAS)). To take part in the nested feasibility trial, participants also had to have a score of 20 or more on the Short Health Anxiety Inventory. We excluded people from the trial if they had had COVID-19 within the previous 4 weeks, if they were currently self-isolating or if they were already receiving psychological treatment.We publicised the study nationally through adverts, social media and posts on message boards. We also recruited participants via clinicians working in primary and secondary care NHS services in London. All those in the active arm will be offered 5-10 sessions of remotely delivered modified cognitive-behavioural therapy for health anxiety (CBT-HA). We will examine the proportion of participants who remain above threshold on the CAS at 3 and 6 months and factors that influence levels of COVID-19 anxiety over 6 months using mixed effects logistic regression. The key feasibility metrics for the nested trial are the level of uptake of CBT-HA and the rate of follow-up., Ethics and Dissemination: Approved by Leicester Central Research Ethics Committee (reference: 20/EM/0238). The results of the study will be published in peer-reviewed scientific journals., Trial Registration Number: ISRCTN14973494., Competing Interests: Competing interests: HT is author of a book on cognitive–behavioural therapy for treating people with health anxiety. Other authors declare that they have no competing interests., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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27. Bidirectional associations between sleep problems and behavioural difficulties and health-related quality of life in adolescents: Evidence from the SCAMP longitudinal cohort study.
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Shen C, Mireku MO, Di Simplicio M, Dumontheil I, Thomas MSC, Röösli M, Elliott P, and Toledano MB
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Background: Sleep problems show associations with negative outcomes in both physical and mental health in adolescents, but the associations may be reciprocal. We aimed to assess bidirectional associations between sleep problems and mental health symptoms including behavioural difficulties (internalising and externalising difficulties) and low health-related quality of life (HRQoL)., Methods: A total of 6616 adolescents (52.4% females) across Greater London completed baseline assessments when they were aged 11-12 years, and 3803 of them (57.2% females) completed follow-up assessments at aged 13-15 years. Weekday and weekend sleep duration were derived from self-reported bedtime, sleep onset latency and wake time. Sleep disturbance was assessed using a standardized sleep disturbance scale. Internalising and externalising difficulties were assessed using subscales of the Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire. HRQoL was assessed using the KIDSCREEN-10 questionnaire. Cross-lagged structural equation modelling was used with multiple imputation to examine bidirectional associations between sleep problems and mental health symptoms., Results: Females had greater internalising difficulties, worse HRQoL and more sleep disturbance than males. Persistent insufficient weekday and weekend sleep, and sleep disturbance (i.e., at both baseline and follow-up) were associated with internalising and externalising difficulties and low HRQoL at follow-up (ORs ranged from 1.53 to 3.63). Persistent externalising difficulties and low HRQoL were also associated with insufficient weekend sleep and sleep disturbance at follow-up (ORs ranged from 1.68 to 4.25). Using continuous variables, we found bidirectional associations between weekday sleep duration and HRQoL, weekend sleep duration and externalising score, sleep quality and internalising score, and sleep quality and HRQoL. The association magnitudes were mostly similar in the two directions., Conclusions: Our study showed bidirectional associations between sleep problems and mental health symptoms during adolescence, indicating that early intervention and treatment on the first-occurring symptom may prevent the development of subsequent problems., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that they have no competing or potential conflicts of interest., (© 2022 The Authors. JCPP Advances published by John Wiley & Sons Ltdon behalf of Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.)
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- 2022
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28. The Association Between Sleep Disturbance and Suicidality in Psychiatric Inpatients Transitioning to the Community: Protocol for an Ecological Momentary Assessment Study.
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Dewa LH, Pappa S, Greene T, Cooke J, Mitchell L, Hadley M, Di Simplicio M, Woodcock T, and Aylin P
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Background: Patients are at high risk of suicidal behavior and death by suicide immediately following discharge from inpatient psychiatric hospitals. Furthermore, there is a high prevalence of sleep problems in inpatient settings, which is associated with worse outcomes following hospitalization. However, it is unknown whether poor sleep is associated with suicidality following initial hospital discharge., Objective: Our study objective is to describe a protocol for an ecological momentary assessment (EMA) study that aims to examine the relationship between sleep and suicidality in discharged patients., Methods: Our study will use an EMA design based on a wearable device to examine the sleep-suicide relationship during the transition from acute inpatient care to the community. Prospectively discharged inpatients 18 to 35 years old with mental disorders (N=50) will be assessed for eligibility and recruited across 2 sites. Data on suicidal ideation, behavior, and imagery; nonsuicidal self-harm and imagery; defeat, entrapment, and hopelessness; affect; and sleep will be collected on the Pro-Diary V wrist-worn electronic watch for up to 14 days. Objective sleep and daytime activity will be measured using the inbuilt MotionWare software. Questionnaires will be administered face-to-face at baseline and follow up, and data will also be collected on the acceptability and feasibility of using the Pro-Diary V watch to monitor the transition following discharge. The study has been, and will continue to be, coproduced with young people with experience of being in an inpatient setting and suicidality., Results: South Birmingham Research Ethics Committee (21/WM/0128) approved the study on June 28, 2021. We expect to see a relationship between poor sleep and postdischarge suicidality. Results will be available in 2022., Conclusions: This protocol describes the first coproduced EMA study to examine the relationship between sleep and suicidality and to apply the integrated motivational volitional model in young patients transitioning from a psychiatric hospital to the community. We expect our findings will inform coproduction in suicidology research and clarify the role of digital monitoring of suicidality and sleep before and after initial hospital discharge., International Registered Report Identifier (irrid): PRR1-10.2196/33817., (©Lindsay H Dewa, Sofia Pappa, Talya Greene, James Cooke, Lizzie Mitchell, Molly Hadley, Martina Di Simplicio, Thomas Woodcock, Paul Aylin. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (https://www.researchprotocols.org), 17.05.2022.)
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- 2022
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29. CCopeY: A Mixed-Methods Coproduced Study on the Mental Health Status and Coping Strategies of Young People During COVID-19 UK Lockdown.
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Dewa LH, Crandell C, Choong E, Jaques J, Bottle A, Kilkenny C, Lawrence-Jones A, Di Simplicio M, Nicholls D, and Aylin P
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- Adolescent, Communicable Disease Control, Health Status, Humans, Pandemics, United Kingdom, Young Adult, Adaptation, Psychological, COVID-19 psychology, Mental Health
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Purpose: Exploring the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on young people's mental health is an increasing priority. Studies to date are largely surveys and lack meaningful involvement from service users in their design, planning, and delivery. The study aimed to examine the mental health status and coping strategies of young people during the first UK COVID-19 lockdown using coproduction methodology., Methods: The mental health status of young people (aged 16-24) in April 2020 was established utilizing a sequential explanatory coproduced mixed methods design. Factors associated with poor mental health status, including coping strategies, were also examined using an online survey and semi-structured interviews., Results: Since the lockdown, 30.3% had poor mental health, and 10.8% had self-harmed. Young people identifying as Black/Black-British ethnicity had the highest increased odds of experiencing poor mental health (odds ratio [OR] 3.688, 95% CI .54-25.40). Behavioral disengagement (OR 1.462, 95% CI 1.22-1.76), self-blame (OR 1.307 95% CI 1.10-1.55), and substance use (OR 1.211 95% CI 1.02-1.44) coping strategies, negative affect (OR 1.109, 95% CI 1.07-1.15), sleep problems (OR .915 95% CI .88-.95) and conscientiousness personality trait (OR .819 95% CI .69-.98) were significantly associated with poor mental health. Three qualitative themes were identified: (1) pre-existing/developed helpful coping strategies employed, (2) mental health difficulties worsened, and (3) mental health and nonmental health support needed during and after lockdown., Conclusion: Poor mental health is associated with dysfunctional coping strategies. Innovative coping strategies can help other young people cope during and after lockdowns, with digital and school promotion and application., (Copyright © 2021 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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30. Hypomanic-like experiences and spontaneous emotional mental imagery.
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O'Donnell C, Di Simplicio M, and Burnett Heyes S
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- Adolescent, Adult, Emotions, Humans, Imagery, Psychotherapy, Reproducibility of Results, Young Adult, Bipolar Disorder, Imagination
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Background: Bipolar spectrum disorders (BPSD) are associated with frequent and emotional mental imagery, theorized to play a role in mood instability. However, we lack methods for measuring tendency to experience emotional mental imagery in daily life. The current study developed such a measure and evaluated the hypothesis that a high tendency to experience emotional imagery in daily life would be associated with higher levels of hypomanic-like experiences., Methods: We conducted two rounds of studies to develop and refine a measure of spontaneous emotional imagery (E-SUIS) using factor analysis. We conducted a third study to test the relationship between E-SUIS score and hypomanic-like experiences. Participants (total N = 554, age 18-25) comprised an unselected community sample., Results: First, factor analysis indicated a unidimensional factor structure and excellent reliability (α=0.87) of our novel measure of spontaneous emotional mental imagery. Second, higher scores on a hypomanic-like experiences scale related to higher use of both spontaneous emotional imagery and spontaneous non-emotional imagery. Spontaneous emotional mental imagery significantly improved the prediction of hypomanic-like experiences over non-emotional mental imagery., Limitations: Only two mental imagery measures were included. To determine discriminant validity of the E-SUIS requires additional imagery measures or interviews., Conclusions: Levels of hypomanic-like experiences were related to the tendency to use emotional imagery in daily life. Additionally, spontaneous use of emotional imagery appears to be a better predictor of hypomanic-like experiences in the general population compared to spontaneous use of non-emotional imagery., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2020
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31. Suicidal Imagery in Borderline Personality Disorder and Major Depressive Disorder.
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Schultebraucks K, Duesenberg M, Di Simplicio M, Holmes EA, and Roepke S
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Risk Factors, Borderline Personality Disorder psychology, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology, Suicidal Ideation
- Abstract
A better understanding of suicidal behavior is important to detect suicidality in at-risk populations such as patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD), posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and major depressive disorder (MDD). Suicidal tendencies are clinically assessed by verbal thoughts rather than by specifically asking about mental images. This study examines whether imagery and verbal thoughts about suicide occur and differ between patients with BPD with and without comorbid PTSD compared to patients with MDD (clinical controls). All patient groups experienced suicide-related images. Patients with BPD with comorbid PTSD reported significantly more vivid images than patients with MDD. Severity of suicidal ideation, number of previous suicide attempts, and childhood traumata were significantly associated with suicidal imagery across all patient groups. The authors demonstrate for the first time that suicide-related mental imagery occurs in BPD and is associated with suicidal ideation. This finding highlights the importance of assessing mental imagery related to suicide in clinical practice.
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- 2020
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32. Imaginator: A Proof-of-Concept Feasibility Trial of a Brief Imagery-Based Psychological Intervention for Young People Who Self-Harm.
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Di Simplicio M, Appiah-Kusi E, Wilkinson P, Watson P, Meiser-Stedman C, Kavanagh DJ, and Holmes EA
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- Adolescent, Adult, Feasibility Studies, Humans, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Young Adult, Psychosocial Intervention, Self-Injurious Behavior therapy
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Objectives: The Imaginator study tested the feasibility of a short mental imagery-based psychological intervention for young people who self-harm and used a stepped-wedge design to investigate effects on self-harm frequency reduction at 3 and 6 months., Method: A total of 38 participants aged 16-25 were recruited via community self-referral and mental health services. Participants were randomized to immediate delivery of Functional Imagery Training (FIT) or usual care followed by delayed delivery after 3 months. FIT comprised two face-to-face sessions, five phone sessions, and use of a smartphone app. Outcomes' assessment was blind to allocation., Results: Three quarters of those who began treatment completed face-to-face sessions, and 57% completed five or more sessions in total. Self-harm frequency data were obtained on 76% of the sample at 3 months (primary outcome) and 63% at 6 months. FIT produced moderate reductions in self-harm frequency at 3 months after immediate (d = 0.65) and delayed delivery (d = 0.75). The Immediate FIT group maintained improvements from 3 to 6 months (d = 0.05). Participants receiving usual care also reduced self-harm (d = 0.47)., Conclusions: A brief mental imagery-based psychological intervention targeting self-harm in young people is feasible and may comprise a novel transdiagnostic treatment for self-harm., (© 2020 The American Association of Suicidology.)
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- 2020
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33. Mental images, entrapment and affect in young adults meeting criteria of nonsuicidal self-injury disorder (NSSID) - a daily diary study.
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Cloos M, Di Simplicio M, Hammerle F, and Steil R
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Background: Incidents of nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) are often accompanied by mental images which could be perceived as distressing and/or soothing; yet existing data is derived from participants with a history of NSSI using retrospective methods. This study investigated mental images related to NSSI ("NSSI-images"), and their relationship to the proposed Nonsuicidal Self-Injury Disorder (NSSID)., Methods: An e-mail was sent to all female students of the local University providing the link to an online screening and 201 students with a history of repetitive NSSI responded. Nineteen eligible participants meeting criteria of NSSID (mean age = 25; 32% with migrant background) further completed a baseline interview and a ten-day-diary protocol., Results: Among the sample of N = 201, 83.6% reported NSSI-images. In the subsample of n = 19 diagnosed with NSSID, the frequencies of NSSI and NSSI-images were correlated; about 80% of the most significant NSSI-images were either of NSSI or of an instrument associated with NSSI (i.e., a razorblade). In the diary, 53% of the sample self-injured. NSSI-images were reported on 94% of NSSI-days, and on days with NSSI and NSSI-images, the images almost always occurred first; the images were overall perceived as twice more distressing than comforting. Images on NSSI-days were characterized by more comfort, intrusiveness and compellingness yet less vividness, and increased subsequent positive and negative affect compared to non-NSSI days. NSSI-days were further marked by increased entrapment beliefs and increased negative yet decreased positive affect at night. These results were non-significant., Limitations: Due to non-significant results among a small sample size and a low rate of NSSI among the NSSID-group, results remain preliminary., Conclusions: The study provides information on feasibility and methodological challenges such as intervention effects of the diary. NSSI-images may be common among individuals who engage in NSSI; they may capture ambivalent (positive and negative) appraisals of NSSI and thus play a role in NSSI and possibly a disorder such as NSSID. The preoccupation with NSSI (Criterion C of NSSID in DSM-5) may as well be imagery-based., Registration: The study was retrospectively registered with the DRKS under the number DRKS00011854., Competing Interests: Ethics approval and consent to participateInformed consent was obtained prior to all parts of the study. Ethical approval was obtained from the ethics committee of the psychological faculty of the Goethe University of Frankfurt. The authors have no competing interests to declare.Competing interestsThe authors declare that they have no competing interests., (© The Author(s). 2020.)
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- 2020
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34. Emotional Mental Imagery Abnormalities in Monozygotic Twins With, at High-Risk of, and Without Affective Disorders: Present in Affected Twins in Remission but Absent in High-Risk Twins.
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Di Simplicio M, Lau-Zhu A, Meluken I, Taylor P, Kessing LV, Vinberg M, Holmes EA, and Miskowiak KW
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Background: Mental imagery abnormalities feature across affective disorders including bipolar disorder (BD) and unipolar depression (UD). Maladaptive emotional imagery has been proposed as a maintenance factor for affective symptomatology and a target for mechanism-driven psychological treatment developments. Where imagery abnormalities feature beyond acute affective episodes, further opportunities for innovation arise beyond treatments, such as for tertiary/relapse prevention (e.g., in remitted individuals) or primary prevention (e.g., in non-affected but at-risk individuals). The aim of our study was to investigate for the first time the presence of possible mental imagery abnormalities in affected individuals in remission and at-risk individuals for affective disorders using a familial risk design. Methods: A population-based cohort of monozygotic twins was recruited through linkage between the Danish national registries ( N =204). Participants were grouped as: affected (remitted BD/UD; n = 115); high-risk (co-twin with history of BD/UD; n = 49), or low-risk (no co-twin history of BD/UD; n = 40). Twins completed mental imagery measures spanning key subjective domains (spontaneous imagery use and emotional imagery) and cognitive domains (imagery inspection and imagery manipulation). Results: Affected twins in remission reported enhanced emotional mental imagery compared to both low- and high-risk twins. This was characterized by greater impact of i) intrusive prospective imagery (Impact of Future Events Scale) and ii) deliberately-generated prospective imagery of negative scenarios (Prospective Imagery Task). There were no significant differences in these key measures between affected BD and UD twins in remission. Additionally, low- and high-risk twins did not significantly differ on these emotional imagery measures. There were also no significant differences between the three groups on non-emotional measures including spontaneous imagery use and cognitive stages of imagery. Conclusions: Abnormalities in emotional prospective imagery are present in monozygotic twins with affective disorders in remission-despite preserved cognitive stages of imagery-but absent in unaffected high-risk twins, and thus do not appear to index familial risk (i.e., unlikely to qualify as "endophenotypes"). Elevated emotional prospective imagery represents a promising treatment/prevention target in affective disorders., (Copyright © 2019 Di Simplicio, Lau-Zhu, Meluken, Taylor, Kessing, Vinberg, Holmes and Miskowiak.)
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- 2019
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35. Mental imagery in psychiatry: conceptual & clinical implications.
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Ji JL, Kavanagh DJ, Holmes EA, MacLeod C, and Di Simplicio M
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- Emotions, Humans, Mental Disorders psychology, Imagination, Mental Disorders physiopathology
- Abstract
Mental imagery refers to the experience of perception in the absence of external sensory input. Deficits in the ability to generate mental imagery or to distinguish it from actual sensory perception are linked to neurocognitive conditions such as dementia and schizophrenia, respectively. However, the importance of mental imagery to psychiatry extends beyond neurocognitive impairment. Mental imagery has a stronger link to emotion than verbal-linguistic cognition, serving to maintain and amplify emotional states, with downstream impacts on motivation and behavior. As a result, anomalies in the occurrence of emotion-laden mental imagery has transdiagnostic significance for emotion, motivation, and behavioral dysfunction across mental disorders. This review aims to demonstrate the conceptual and clinical significance of mental imagery in psychiatry through examples of mood and anxiety disorders, self-harm and suicidality, and addiction. We contend that focusing on mental imagery assessment in research and clinical practice can increase our understanding of the cognitive basis of psychopathology in mental disorders, with the potential to drive the development of algorithms to aid treatment decision-making and inform transdiagnostic treatment innovation.
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- 2019
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36. Neural response during emotion regulation in monozygotic twins at high familial risk of affective disorders.
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Meluken I, Ottesen NM, Phan KL, Goldin PR, Di Simplicio M, Macoveanu J, Siebner HR, Kessing LV, Vinberg M, and Miskowiak KW
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- Adolescent, Adult, Affect physiology, Bipolar Disorder physiopathology, Brain Mapping methods, Cognition physiology, Female, Frontal Lobe physiopathology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Middle Aged, Mood Disorders genetics, Mood Disorders physiopathology, Young Adult, Brain physiopathology, Emotions physiology, Genetic Predisposition to Disease genetics, Twins, Monozygotic genetics
- Abstract
Purpose: We investigated the neural correlates of emotion regulation and -reactivity in adult unaffected monozygotic twins with a co-twin history of unipolar or bipolar disorder (high-risk), remitted or partially remitted twins with a personal history of unipolar or bipolar disorder (affected) and twins with no personal or first-degree family history of unipolar or bipolar disorder (low-risk)., Methods: We assessed 37 high-risk, 56 affected and 28 low-risk participants. Participants viewed unpleasant and neutral pictures during functional magnetic resonance imaging and were instructed to down-regulate their emotional response through reappraisal or mental imagery, as well as to maintain the elicited emotion., Results: After adjusting for subsyndromal depressive symptoms, bilateral supplementary motor areas, posterior dorsal anterior cingulate cortices and the left frontal eye field showed less activity during reappraisal of unpleasant pictures in high-risk than low-risk participants. Notably, affected participants did not differ from high-risk or low-risk participants in neural response during reappraisal. There were no group differences in ventrolateral prefrontal cortex seed based functional connectivity during reappraisal or neural response during mental imagery or emotional reactivity., Conclusion: Lesser response in dorsal midline areas might reflect familial risk related abnormalities during down regulation of emotional reactivity through reappraisal., (Copyright © 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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37. Imagery-Focused Cognitive Therapy (ImCT) for Mood Instability and Anxiety in a Small Sample of Patients with Bipolar Disorder: a Pilot Clinical Audit.
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Hales SA, Di Simplicio M, Iyadurai L, Blackwell SE, Young K, Fairburn CG, Geddes JR, Goodwin GM, and Holmes EA
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- Adult, Anxiety psychology, Bipolar Disorder complications, Depression complications, Depression psychology, Depression therapy, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Satisfaction, Pilot Projects, Surveys and Questionnaires, Treatment Outcome, Affect, Anxiety complications, Anxiety therapy, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Bipolar Disorder therapy, Clinical Audit, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy methods, Imagery, Psychotherapy
- Abstract
Background: Despite the global impact of bipolar disorder (BD), treatment success is limited. Challenges include syndromal and subsyndromal mood instability, comorbid anxiety, and uncertainty around mechanisms to target. The Oxford Mood Action Psychology Programme (OxMAPP) offered a novel approach within a cognitive behavioural framework, via mental imagery-focused cognitive therapy (ImCT)., Aims: This clinical audit evaluated referral rates, clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction with the OxMAPP service., Method: Eleven outpatients with BD received ImCT in addition to standard psychiatric care. Mood data were collected weekly from 6 months pre-treatment to 6 months post-treatment via routine mood monitoring. Anxiety was measured weekly from start of treatment until 1 month post-treatment. Patient feedback was provided via questionnaire., Results: Referral and treatment uptake rates indicated acceptability to referrers and patients. From pre- to post-treatment, there was (i) a significant reduction in the duration of depressive episode relapses, and (ii) a non-significant trend towards a reduction in the number of episodes, with small to medium effect size. There was a large effect size for the reduction in weekly anxiety symptoms from assessment to 1 month follow-up. Patient feedback indicated high levels of satisfaction with ImCT, and underscored the importance of the mental imagery focus., Conclusions: This clinical audit provides preliminary evidence that ImCT can help improve depressive and anxiety symptoms in BD as part of integrated clinical care, with high patient satisfaction and acceptability. Formal assessment designs are needed to further test the feasibility and efficacy of the new ImCT treatment on anxiety and mood instability.
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- 2018
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38. Emotional cascade theory and non-suicidal self-injury: the importance of imagery and positive affect.
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Hasking PA, Di Simplicio M, McEvoy PM, and Rees CS
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- Adolescent, Adult, Cognition, Female, Humans, Male, Odds Ratio, Psychological Theory, Rumination, Cognitive, Self Report, Students psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Affect, Emotions, Imagery, Psychotherapy, Self-Injurious Behavior psychology
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Grounded in Emotional Cascade Theory, we explored whether rumination and multisensory imagery-based cognitions moderated the relationships between affect and both odds of non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI), and frequency of the behaviour. A sample of 393 university students completed self-report questionnaires assessing the constructs of interest. Contrary to expectations, rumination did not emerge as a significant moderator of the affect-NSSI relationship. However, the relationship between affect and frequency of NSSI was moderated by the use of imagery. Further, the relationship between negative affect and NSSI was moderated by positive affect, underscoring the need to consider both negative and positive affect in models of NSSI. Most youth who self-injured reported thinking in images while the urge to self-injure was strong, with 53% thinking in images at least half the time. Future work is needed to explore how positive and negative affect work in concert to govern NSSI, and how imagery might either exacerbate or reduce risk of NSSI.
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- 2018
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39. The role of mental imagery in mood amplification: An investigation across subclinical features of bipolar disorders.
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O'Donnell C, Di Simplicio M, Brown R, Holmes EA, and Burnett Heyes S
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- Adolescent, Adult, Affective Symptoms psychology, Depression psychology, Female, Humans, Imagination physiology, Male, Mood Disorders psychology, Young Adult, Affect physiology, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Emotions physiology, Imagery, Psychotherapy
- Abstract
Vivid emotional mental imagery has been identified across a range of mental disorders. In bipolar spectrum disorders - psychopathologies characterized by mood swings that alternate between depression and mania, and include irritability and mixed affect states - mental imagery has been proposed to drive instability in both 'positive' and 'negative' mood. That is, mental imagery can act as an "emotional amplifier". The current experimental study tested this hypothesis and investigated imagery characteristics associated with mood amplification using a spectrum approach to psychopathology. Young adults (N = 42) with low, medium and high scores on a measure of subclinical features of bipolar disorder (BD), i.e., hypomanic-like experiences such as overly 'positive' mood, excitement and hyperactivity, completed a mental imagery generation training task using positive picture-word cues. Results indicate that (1) mood amplification levels were dependent on self-reported hypomanic-like experiences. In particular, (2) engaging in positive mental imagery led to mood amplification of both positive and negative mood in those participants higher in hypomanic-like experiences. Further, (3) in participants scoring high for hypomanic-like experiences, greater vividness of mental imagery during the experimental task was associated with greater amplification of positive mood. Thus, for individuals with high levels of hypomanic-like experiences, the generation of emotional mental imagery may play a causal role in their mood changes. This finding has implications for understanding mechanisms driving mood amplification in bipolar spectrum disorders, such as targeting imagery vividness in therapeutic interventions., (Copyright © 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2018
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40. 'Flash-forwards' and suicidal ideation: A prospective investigation of mental imagery, entrapment and defeat in a cohort from the Hong Kong Mental Morbidity Survey.
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Ng RMK, Di Simplicio M, McManus F, Kennerley H, and Holmes EA
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- Adult, Female, Hong Kong, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Imagination physiology, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide psychology
- Abstract
'Flash-forwards' - mental images of suicide - have been reported in selected Caucasian samples. Perceptions of defeat and entrapment are considered to be associated with suicidal ideation. We aimed to investigate (1) the presence of suicidal flash-forwards in people with recent suicidal ideation versus those without such ideation in an Asian sample, and (2) associations between suicidal flash-forwards, and perceptions of entrapment accounting for suicidal ideation. Eighty two suicidal and 80 non-suicidal participants from the Hong Kong Mental Morbidity Survey completed questionnaires including suicidal ideation, presence of suicidal flash-forward images, defeat and entrapment, at baseline and seven weeks later. Suicidal 'flash-forwards' were present only in suicidal cases. People with recent suicidal ideation and suicidal flash-forwards had more severe suicidal ideation than those without flash-forwards. Compared to those without suicidal ideation, people with recent suicidal ideation reported higher entrapment and defeat levels. Resolution of suicidal ideation over time was associated with fewer suicidal flash-forwards and reduced entrapment perceptions. At baseline and seven weeks, suicidal ideation was predicted by an interaction between suicidal flash-forwards presence and perceptions of entrapment. Mental imagery of suicide appears to be associated with suicidal ideation, and may represent a novel target in suicidal risk assessment and prevention., (Copyright © 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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41. An investigation of mental imagery in bipolar disorder: Exploring "the mind's eye".
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Di Simplicio M, Renner F, Blackwell SE, Mitchell H, Stratford HJ, Watson P, Myers N, Nobre AC, Lau-Zhu A, and Holmes EA
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Interview, Psychological methods, Male, Prospective Studies, Psychopathology, Statistics as Topic, Surveys and Questionnaires, Anxiety diagnosis, Anxiety psychology, Bipolar Disorder diagnosis, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Depression diagnosis, Depression psychology, Imagination
- Abstract
Objectives: Mental imagery abnormalities occur across psychopathologies and are hypothesized to drive emotional difficulties in bipolar disorder (BD). A comprehensive assessment of mental imagery in BD is lacking. We aimed to test whether (i) mental imagery abnormalities (abnormalities in cognitive stages and subjective domains) occur in BD relative to non-clinical controls; and (ii) to determine the specificity of any abnormalities in BD relative to depression and anxiety disorders., Methods: Participants included 54 subjects in the BD group (depressed/euthymic; n=27 in each subgroup), subjects with unipolar depression (n=26), subjects with anxiety disorders (n=25), and non-clinical controls (n=27) matched for age, gender, ethnicity, education, and premorbid IQ. Experimental tasks assessed cognitive (non-emotional) measures of mental imagery (cognitive stages). Questionnaires, experimental tasks, and a phenomenological interview assessed subjective domains including spontaneous imagery use, interpretation bias, and emotional mental imagery., Results: (i) Compared to non-clinical controls, the BD combined group reported a greater impact of intrusive prospective imagery in daily life, more vivid and "real" negative images (prospective imagery task), and higher self-involvement (picture-word task). The BD combined group showed no clear abnormalities in cognitive stages of mental imagery. (ii) When depressed individuals with BD were compared to the depressed or anxious clinical control groups, no significant differences remained-across all groups, imagery differences were associated with affective lability and anxiety., Conclusions: Compared to non-clinical controls, BD is characterized by abnormalities in aspects of emotional mental imagery within the context of otherwise normal cognitive aspects. When matched for depression and anxiety, these abnormalities are not specific to BD-rather, imagery may reflect a transdiagnostic marker of emotional psychopathology., (© 2016 Medical Research Council. Bipolar Disorders Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2016
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42. Oxytocin and emotion processing.
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Di Simplicio M and Harmer CJ
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- Animals, Attention drug effects, Attention physiology, Cognition drug effects, Cognition physiology, Decision Making drug effects, Decision Making physiology, Facial Expression, Humans, Memory drug effects, Memory physiology, Recognition, Psychology drug effects, Recognition, Psychology physiology, Social Perception, Emotions drug effects, Emotions physiology, Oxytocin pharmacology, Oxytocin therapeutic use
- Abstract
Since the observation that oxytocin has key effects on social decision making, research on this exciting neuropeptide has doubled in volume: hundreds of studies have pursued the promise of a specific oxytocin action on high-level cognition and social function with wide potential translational implications (from autism to social anxiety to dementia). Here we review the evidence on whether the complex behavioural effects observed in humans after exogenous oxytocin administration build on changes in basic emotional information processing, in particular emotional facial expressions recognition, and attention and memory for emotionally-valenced stimuli.We observe that recent studies confirm a facilitatory effect of oxytocin to more accurate emotion processing, irrespective of emotion type. However, it remains unclear whether this action precedes, is independent of or even secondary to the neuropeptide promoting a greater salience of social stimuli. Overall, this growing research area has shown that oxytocin produces behavioural and neurofunctional outcomes that are highly dependent on the experimental context and on individual differences (gender, personality, life experiences). This poses an exciting challenge for future experimental medicine designs to address and unpack complex interactions between individual and context characteristic, which is needed for the development of more precise clinical applications., (© The Author(s) 2016.)
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- 2016
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43. Mental imagery and bipolar disorders: Introducing scope for psychological treatment development?
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Ng RM, Di Simplicio M, and Holmes EA
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- Adaptation, Psychological, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Cognition, Emotions, Humans, Bipolar Disorder therapy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy methods, Imagery, Psychotherapy methods
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- 2016
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44. Applications of time-series analysis to mood fluctuations in bipolar disorder to promote treatment innovation: a case series.
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Holmes EA, Bonsall MB, Hales SA, Mitchell H, Renner F, Blackwell SE, Watson P, Goodwin GM, and Di Simplicio M
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- Adult, Bipolar Disorder physiopathology, Female, Humans, Male, Severity of Illness Index, Treatment Outcome, Affect physiology, Bipolar Disorder diagnosis, Bipolar Disorder therapy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy methods, Imagery, Psychotherapy methods
- Abstract
Treatment innovation for bipolar disorder has been hampered by a lack of techniques to capture a hallmark symptom: ongoing mood instability. Mood swings persist during remission from acute mood episodes and impair daily functioning. The last significant treatment advance remains Lithium (in the 1970s), which aids only the minority of patients. There is no accepted way to establish proof of concept for a new mood-stabilizing treatment. We suggest that combining insights from mood measurement with applied mathematics may provide a step change: repeated daily mood measurement (depression) over a short time frame (1 month) can create individual bipolar mood instability profiles. A time-series approach allows comparison of mood instability pre- and post-treatment. We test a new imagery-focused cognitive therapy treatment approach (MAPP; Mood Action Psychology Programme) targeting a driver of mood instability, and apply these measurement methods in a non-concurrent multiple baseline design case series of 14 patients with bipolar disorder. Weekly mood monitoring and treatment target data improved for the whole sample combined. Time-series analyses of daily mood data, sampled remotely (mobile phone/Internet) for 28 days pre- and post-treatment, demonstrated improvements in individuals' mood stability for 11 of 14 patients. Thus the findings offer preliminary support for a new imagery-focused treatment approach. They also indicate a step in treatment innovation without the requirement for trials in illness episodes or relapse prevention. Importantly, daily measurement offers a description of mood instability at the individual patient level in a clinically meaningful time frame. This costly, chronic and disabling mental illness demands innovation in both treatment approaches (whether pharmacological or psychological) and measurement tool: this work indicates that daily measurements can be used to detect improvement in individual mood stability for treatment innovation (MAPP)., Competing Interests: GMG declares shares in P1vital and in the last 2 years having served as consultant, advisor or continuing medical education speaker for AstraZeneca, Abbvie, Cephalon/Teva, Convergence, Eli Lilly and Co, GSK, Lundbeck, Medscape, Merck, Otsuka, P1vital, Servier, Sunovion and Takeda. The remaining authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2016
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45. Self-images in the present and future: Role of affect and the bipolar phenotype.
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Di Simplicio M, Holmes EA, and Rathbone CJ
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- Adult, Affect, Anxiety complications, Bipolar Disorder complications, Depression complications, Female, Humans, Male, Phenotype, Social Behavior, Social Stigma, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Anxiety psychology, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Depression psychology, Self Concept
- Abstract
Background: Bipolar Spectrum Disorder (BPSD) is associated with changes in self-related processing and affect, yet the relationship between self-image and affect in the BPSD phenotype is unclear., Methods: 47 young adults were assessed for hypomanic experiences (BPSD phenotype) using the Mood Disorders Questionnaire. Current and future self-images (e.g. I am… I will be…) were generated and rated for emotional valence, stability, and (for future self-images only) certainty. The relationship between self-image ratings and measures of affect (depression, anxiety and mania) were analysed in relation to the BPSD phenotype., Results: The presence of the BPSD phenotype significantly moderated the relationship between (1) affect and stability ratings for negative self-images, and (2) affect and certainty ratings for positive future self-images. Higher positivity ratings for current self-images were associated with lower depression and anxiety scores., Limitations: This was a non-clinical group of young adults sampled for hypomanic experiences, which limits the extension of the work to clinical levels of psychopathology. This study cannot address the causal relationships between affect, self-images, and BPSD. Future work should use clinical samples and experimental mood manipulation designs., Conclusions: BPSD phenotype can shape the relationship between affect and current and future self-images. This finding will guide future clinical research to elucidate BPSD vulnerability mechanisms and, consequently, the development of early interventions., (Copyright © 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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46. How cannabis causes paranoia: using the intravenous administration of ∆9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) to identify key cognitive mechanisms leading to paranoia.
- Author
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Freeman D, Dunn G, Murray RM, Evans N, Lister R, Antley A, Slater M, Godlewska B, Cornish R, Williams J, Di Simplicio M, Igoumenou A, Brenneisen R, Tunbridge EM, Harrison PJ, Harmer CJ, Cowen P, and Morrison PD
- Subjects
- Administration, Intravenous, Adult, Cannabinoid Receptor Agonists administration & dosage, Dronabinol administration & dosage, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Paranoid Disorders physiopathology, Young Adult, Affect drug effects, Cannabinoid Receptor Agonists adverse effects, Dronabinol adverse effects, Paranoid Disorders chemically induced
- Abstract
Paranoia is receiving increasing attention in its own right, since it is a central experience of psychotic disorders and a marker of the health of a society. Paranoia is associated with use of the most commonly taken illicit drug, cannabis. The objective was to determine whether the principal psychoactive ingredient of cannabis-∆(9)-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)-causes paranoia and to use the drug as a probe to identify key cognitive mechanisms underlying paranoia. A randomized, placebo-controlled, between-groups test of the effects of intravenous THC was conducted. A total of 121 individuals with paranoid ideation were randomized to receive placebo, THC, or THC preceded by a cognitive awareness condition. Paranoia was assessed extensively via a real social situation, an immersive virtual reality experiment, and standard self-report and interviewer measures. Putative causal factors were assessed. Principal components analysis was used to create a composite paranoia score and composite causal variables to be tested in a mediation analysis. THC significantly increased paranoia, negative affect (anxiety, worry, depression, negative thoughts about the self), and a range of anomalous experiences, and reduced working memory capacity. The increase in negative affect and in anomalous experiences fully accounted for the increase in paranoia. Working memory changes did not lead to paranoia. Making participants aware of the effects of THC had little impact. In this largest study of intravenous THC, it was definitively demonstrated that the drug triggers paranoid thoughts in vulnerable individuals. The most likely mechanism of action causing paranoia was the generation of negative affect and anomalous experiences., (© The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center.)
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Psychological therapy for anxiety in bipolar spectrum disorders: a systematic review.
- Author
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Stratford HJ, Cooper MJ, Di Simplicio M, Blackwell SE, and Holmes EA
- Subjects
- Humans, Anxiety Disorders complications, Anxiety Disorders therapy, Bipolar Disorder complications, Bipolar Disorder therapy, Psychotherapy methods
- Abstract
Comorbid anxiety is common in bipolar spectrum disorders [BPSD], and is associated with poor outcomes. Its clinical relevance is highlighted by the "anxious distress specifier" in the revised criteria for Bipolar Disorders in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual 5th Edition [DSM-5]. This article reviews evidence for the effectiveness of psychological therapy for anxiety in adults with BPSD (bipolar I, II, not otherwise specified, cyclothymia, and rapid cycling disorders). A systematic search yielded 22 treatment studies that included an anxiety-related outcome measure. Cognitive behavioural therapy [CBT] for BPSD incorporating an anxiety component reduces anxiety symptoms in cyclothymia, "refractory" and rapid cycling BPSD, whereas standard bipolar treatments have only a modest effect on anxiety. Preliminary evidence is promising for CBT for post-traumatic stress disorder and generalised anxiety disorder in BPSD. Psychoeducation alone does not appear to reduce anxiety, and data for mindfulness-based cognitive therapy [MBCT] appear equivocal. CBT during euthymic phases has the greatest weight of evidence. Where reported, psychological therapy appears acceptable and safe, but more systematic collection and reporting of safety and acceptability information is needed. Development of psychological models and treatment protocols for anxiety in BPSD may help improve outcomes., (Copyright © 2014. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2015
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48. 'Can you look me in the face?' Short-term SSRI administration reverts avoidant ocular face exploration in subjects at risk for psychopathology.
- Author
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Di Simplicio M, Doallo S, Costoloni G, Rohenkohl G, Nobre AC, and Harmer CJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Analysis of Variance, Discrimination, Psychological drug effects, Double-Blind Method, Facial Expression, Female, Humans, Male, Personality Inventory, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Statistics as Topic, Surveys and Questionnaires, Visual Analog Scale, Young Adult, Antisocial Personality Disorder drug therapy, Citalopram therapeutic use, Eye Movements drug effects, Recognition, Psychology drug effects, Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors therapeutic use
- Abstract
Anxiety and depression are associated with altered ocular exploration of facial stimuli, which could have a role in the misinterpretation of ambiguous emotional stimuli. However, it is unknown whether a similar pattern is seen in individuals at risk for psychopathology and whether this can be modified by pharmacological interventions used in these disorders. In Study 1, eye gaze movement during face discrimination was compared in volunteers with high vs low neuroticism scores on the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire. Facial stimuli either displayed a neutral, happy, or fearful expression. In Study 2, volunteers with high neuroticism were randomized in a double-blind design to receive the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor citalopram (20 mg) or placebo for 7 days. On the last day of treatment, eye gaze movement during face presentation and the recognition of different emotional expressions was assessed. In Study 1, highly neurotic volunteers showed reduced eye gaze towards the eyes vs mouth region of the face compared with low neurotic volunteers. In Study 2, citalopram increased gaze maintenance over the face stimuli compared with placebo and enhanced recognition of positive vs negative facial expressions. Longer ocular exploration of happy faces correlated positively with recognition of positive emotions. Individuals at risk for psychopathology presented an avoidant pattern of ocular exploration of faces. Short-term SSRI administration reversed this bias before any mood or anxiety changes. This treatment effect may improve the capacity to scan social stimuli and contribute to the remediation of clinical symptoms related to interpersonal difficulties.
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- 2014
- Full Text
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49. Mental imagery in bipolar affective disorder versus unipolar depression: investigating cognitions at times of 'positive' mood.
- Author
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Ivins A, Di Simplicio M, Close H, Goodwin GM, and Holmes E
- Subjects
- Adult, Depression psychology, Emotions, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Affect, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Cognition, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology
- Abstract
Background: Compared to unipolar depression (UD), depressed mood in bipolar disorder (BD) has been associated with amplified negative mental imagery of the future ('flashforwards'). However, imagery characteristics during positive mood remain poorly explored. We hypothesise first, that unlike UD patients, the most significant positive images of BD patients will be 'flashforwards' (rather than past memories). Second, that BD patients will experience more frequent (and more 'powerful') positive imagery as compared to verbal thoughts and third, that behavioural activation scores will be predicted by imagery variables in the BD group., Methods: BD (n=26) and UD (n=26) patients completed clinical and trait imagery measures followed by an Imagery Interview and a measure of behavioural activation., Results: Compared to UD, BD patients reported more 'flashforwards' compared to past memories and rated their 'flashforwards' as more vivid, exciting and pleasurable. Only the BD group found positive imagery more 'powerful', (preoccupying, 'real' and compelling) as compared to verbal thoughts. Imagery-associated pleasure predicted levels of drive and reward responsiveness in the BD group., Limitations: A limitation in the study was the retrospective design. Moreover pathological and non-pathological periods of "positive" mood were not distinguished in the BD sample., Conclusions: This study reveals BD patients experience positive 'flashforward' imagery in positive mood, with more intense qualities than UD patients. This could contribute to the amplification of emotional states and goal directed behaviour leading into mania, and differentiate BD from UD., (Copyright © 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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50. Revealing the mind's eye: bringing (mental) images into psychiatry.
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Di Simplicio M, McInerney JE, Goodwin GM, Attenburrow MJ, and Holmes EA
- Subjects
- History, 21st Century, Humans, Imagination, Medicine in the Arts, Psychiatry methods
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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