Publications by authors named "Anne Krendl"

Objective: Social connectedness is a modifiable lifestyle factor that delays age-related cognitive decline. Using cross-sectional, longitudinal, and experimental approaches, we examined whether theory of mind - inferring what others think or feel - is a potential mechanism underlying this relationship.

Methods: In Study 1, 305 community-dwelling older adults participating in two different, but related, studies completed comprehensive measures of general cognition, theory of mind, and personal social networks.

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There has been a recent surge of naturalistic methodology to assess complex topics in psychology and neuroscience. Such methods are lauded for their increased ecological validity, aiming to bridge a gap between highly controlled experimental design and purely observational studies. However, these measures present challenges in establishing construct validity.

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  • Aging is linked to a decline in theory of mind, or the ability to understand others' mental states, and the studies investigated whether priming this ability through different methods could enhance performance in older adults.* -
  • Two studies were conducted: the first used an active mindset by engaging participants with a related task before the main test, while the second involved a passive mindset where participants rated episodes before the task.* -
  • Results showed that adopting mindsets led to small-to-medium improvements in theory of mind performance, indicating that motivation can enhance this ability in older adults, independent of their cognitive skills.*
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The mechanisms by which older adults maintain large, complex social networks are not well understood. Prior work has primarily focused on general cognitive ability (e.g.

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  • A lot of people in the U.S. struggle with substance dependence, like alcohol and drug abuse, with millions affected each year.
  • Overdose rates are going up, especially due to opioids and stimulants, which is a big health concern.
  • Stigma around substance use disorders can seriously harm people's lives, but there's not enough research on this stigma compared to other mental health issues, so we need to learn more.
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Objective: People with substance use disorders (SUDs) are faced with pervasive stigma. Education-based interventions tend to emphasize biological causes of dependency; however, health care professionals still stigmatize people who use substances despite being more knowledgeable about biological causes. There may be an important moderating role of personal contact since health care professionals may treat people in the throes of dependency.

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Nearly half the published research in psychology is conducted with online samples, but the preponderance of these studies rely primarily on self-report measures. The current study validated data quality from an online sample on a novel, dynamic task by comparing performance between an in-lab and online sample on two dynamic measures of theory of mind-the ability to infer others' mental states. Theory of mind is a cognitively complex construct that has been widely studied across multiple domains of psychology.

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  • Poor face-name recall is linked to cognitive declines with age, particularly in episodic memory and executive control, but the role of social cognition has been largely ignored.
  • This study examined whether social cognitive abilities, like understanding others' emotions (theory of mind), help improve face-name learning in younger and older adults.
  • Findings indicate that while age affects recognition primarily through episodic memory, recall differences are influenced by both episodic memory and social cognition, suggesting that emotional understanding aids in remembering names associated with faces.
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Positive and meaningful intergroup contact between people who use drugs and those with the potential to provide positive social interactions has been identified as an important pathway to address the burden of drug use by reducing stigmatizing views and behaviors. Traditional approaches to intergroup contact typically rely on laboratory experiments or survey vignettes to examine the consequences of variation in contact conditions and relationships. Although seldom measured, contact occurs naturally through individuals' personal social networks.

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Objectives: Theory of mind-the ability to infer others' mental states-declines over the life span, potentially due to cognitive decline. However, it is unclear whether deficits emerge because older adults use the same strategies as young adults, albeit less effectively, or use different or no strategies. The current study compared the similarity of older adults' theory of mind errors to young adults' and a random model.

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Americans' increasing levels of ideological polarization contribute to pervasive intergroup tensions based on political partisanship. Cues to partisanship may affect even the most basic aspects of perception. First impressions of faces constitute a widely-studied basic aspect of person perception relating to intergroup tensions.

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Background: Common mental disorders, including depression and anxiety, are leading causes of disability worldwide. Digital mental health interventions, such as web-based self-help and other low-intensity treatments (LITs) that are not digital (eg, bibliotherapy), have the potential to reach many individuals by circumventing common barriers present in traditional mental health care. It is unclear how often LITs are used in clinical practice, or whether providers would be interested in their use for treatment waiting lists.

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  • Social cognition is essential for managing social relationships, but evidence indicates older adults often struggle more than younger ones in this area.
  • Neurocognitive decline is typically seen as a main reason for this decline in social-cognitive skills with age, though many other factors may also play a role.
  • The paper suggests re-evaluating previous research by considering motivation, task design, and sample representation, and outlines future research directions to better understand how social cognition changes with aging.
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Drug-related overdose deaths topped 100,000 between 2020 and 2021. Opioids and stimulants are implicated as the primary drivers of this public health crisis. Stigma remains one of the primary barriers to treatment and recovery from substance use disorders.

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Over the past three decades, research from the field of social neuroscience has identified a constellation of brain regions that relate to social cognition. Although these studies have provided important insights into the specific neural regions underlying social behavior, they may overlook the broader neural context in which those regions and the interactions between them are embedded. Network neuroscience is an emerging discipline that focuses on modeling and analyzing brain networks-collections of interacting neural elements.

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Mental health treatment noncompliance (preintake attrition, premature termination) has serious consequences both for mental health providers, as well as for individuals suffering from mental illness. However, prior work has examined preintake attrition and premature treatment termination separately, which limits our ability to determine when attrition is highest (before or after intake), and whether different factors predict attrition throughout the treatment process. Moreover, preintake attrition has been conceptualized as failing to attend a scheduled intake, thereby overlooking potential attrition that may occur earlier.

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Although loneliness and stress have been widely implicated in worse mental health outcomes for college students, the relationship between them remains poorly understood. Data were collected from 111 undergraduates at a large Midwestern university in fall 2019 - winter 2020. A subset (N = 34) of those responded to a follow-up survey during the COVID-19 pandemic (May 2020).

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  • The study investigates how the characteristics of older adults' social networks affect their memory and social cognitive functions, particularly their ability to understand others' thoughts and feelings.
  • It involved 120 older adults who participated in interviews and completed tests measuring their memory and social cognitive abilities, including emotion recognition and theory of mind.
  • Findings indicate that better memory is linked to larger but less dense social networks, while improved theory of mind is associated with having diverse social relationships and at least one acquaintance in their network.
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Although stigma is a major barrier to treatment for those with mental health concerns, it is poorly understood stigma is more or less influential in mental health treatment decisions. In the current work, we examined whether psychological distance - the removal of an event from direct experience - reduced the influence of internalized stigma on willingness to seek treatment. Specifically, we tested the hypothesis that psychological distance versus proximity (e.

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Older adults (OA) evaluate faces to be more trustworthy than do younger adults (YA), yet the processes supporting these more positive evaluations are unclear. This study identified neural mechanisms spontaneously engaged during face perception that differentially relate to OA' and YA' later trustworthiness evaluations. We examined two mechanisms: salience (reflected by amygdala activation) and reward (reflected by caudate activation) - both of which are implicated in evaluating trustworthiness.

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  • A study was conducted to explore the impact of social isolation during COVID-19 on loneliness and depression in older adults.
  • Researchers interviewed 93 adults, comparing their mental health before and during the pandemic, focusing on their social networks and feelings of loneliness.
  • The findings indicated that increased loneliness correlated with higher depression, particularly for those who felt closer to their social networks during the pandemic, highlighting the significance of relationship strength in mental health outcomes.
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Background And Aims: Our ability to combat the opioid epidemic depends, in part, on dismantling the stigma that surrounds drug use. However, this epidemic has been unique and, to date, we have not understood the nature of public prejudices associated with it. Here, we examine the nature and magnitude of public stigma toward prescription opioid use disorder (OUD) using the only nationally representative data available on this topic.

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  • Older adults (OA) show reduced mentalizing abilities during social interactions, as indicated by lower activation in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) when compared to younger adults (YA).
  • A study involved both OA and YA viewing faces from ingroup (White) and outgroup (Black and Asian) individuals while performing a mentalizing task in an fMRI scanner.
  • The findings revealed that OA had less mPFC activation during person perception, which affected their ability to infer mental states from faces, particularly making it harder for them to distinguish between outgroup members.
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Functional connectivity - the co-activation of brain regions - forms the basis of the brain's functional architecture. Often measured during resting-state (i.e.

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