Publications by authors named "Karen Weihs"

Cancer survivors have elevated levels of proinflammatory cytokines, which could be associated with cancer-related symptoms. Given that proinflammatory cytokines heighten negative affect by directly affecting the brain, we explored these direct associations and whether differences in levels of emotional awareness moderate the associations between proinflammatory cytokines and cancer-related symptoms. This cross-sectional, secondary analysis of baseline data was collected from 162 female breast cancer survivors (aged 36-70 years), who were enrolled 6 ± 4 months after completing cancer treatment.

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Emotional awareness (EA) is thought to facilitate psychological health by aiding emotion regulation in oneself and garnering social support from others. This study tested these potential relationships within a one-year longitudinal study of 460 women (age 23-91 years, mean 56.4 years) recently diagnosed with breast cancer (i.

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The term "lovebirds" is often used to describe the loving behaviors and interactions between two romantic partners, but what specific processes distinguish these flourishing lovebird relationships from other committed but "numbed" relationships? The present study aimed to address this knowledge gap through the development and preliminary validation of the Lovebird Scale. The Lovebird Scale describes the thoughts, feelings, behaviors, and habits that constitute and maintain relationship flourishing, which in turn could promote aspects of individual flourishing such as positive affect. We conducted three studies using data collected from 996 English-speaking U.

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Current theoretical models of emotional processing rely mainly on detecting emotional processing through verbal, conscious, and cognitive processes. However, artmaking can potentially reveal embodied and implicit processes that may otherwise remain hidden in verbal expression. This paper attempts to close the scholarly gap by introducing a novel art-based emotional processing model that integrates emotional processing and art therapy literature, incorporating emotional meaning-making, awareness, acceptance, and memory consolidation.

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Article Synopsis
  • Early adversity is linked to mental health issues, but it’s unclear how this happens; previous studies suggested a connection to emotional awareness (EA).
  • This study tested if differences in EA could help explain the relationship between early adversity and mental health outcomes in a sample of 196 students.
  • Findings showed that while early adversity negatively affected emotional functioning (especially in females), EA had a more complex relationship, with some evidence of mediation for positive emotions but limited overall support for EA as a mediator of mental health effects.
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  • Individuals from different cultures possess varying values that shape their emotional experiences, particularly for breast cancer survivors, affecting symptoms like pain, fatigue, and depression.
  • This study examined how emotion processing mediates the link between conservation values (tradition and security) and psychological symptoms in Arab and Jewish women breast cancer survivors, revealing that acceptance and coping strategies shape these experiences differently across cultures.
  • Results showed that Arab women reported higher symptoms of depression and fatigue, higher conservation values, and unique coping strategies compared to Jewish women, highlighting the need for culturally sensitive interventions for cancer survivors.
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  • The study examines how complicated grief (CG) affects the way individuals approach or avoid reminders of their deceased loved ones, influenced by maladaptive behaviors.
  • It aims to identify behavioral differences between those with CG and those without, focusing on how the neuropeptide oxytocin might modify these approaches and avoidances.
  • Results show that non-CG individuals generally approach stimuli, while oxytocin slows responses and reduces avoidance of deceased spouse photos specifically in those with CG, highlighting oxytocin's potential role in addressing CG-related motivations.*
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  • Emotional intelligence (EI) is linked to positive health and behavioral outcomes, leading to the creation of an online training program aimed at enhancing EI skills in adults based on established emotional functioning theories.!* -
  • The program involved 326 participants who were either trained in EI or assigned to a control group, completing engaging online content over a week or three weeks.!* -
  • Results showed significant improvements in self-reported and performance-based EI measures for those in the training group, with benefits lasting up to six months post-training and high participant satisfaction reported.!*
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Metaphors are pervasive in cancer discourse. However, little is known about how metaphor use develops over time within the same patient, and how metaphor use and its content relate to the mental health of the patient. Here, we analyzed metaphor use in personal essays written by breast cancer patients shortly after the time of diagnosis and nine months later, in relation to their depressive symptoms at both time points.

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Article Synopsis
  • Socioemotional skills, important for physical and emotional health, can be developed through an online training program tested on 448 adults, with a majority being female.
  • Those who participated in the training showed significant improvements in emotional awareness and regulation compared to those in the placebo group.
  • Follow-up results indicated that the training not only had lasting effects but also provided some resilience against emotional challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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  • * Results indicated that many participants experienced significant symptoms like depression (51.7%) and cancer-related fatigue (78.8%). Higher emotional acceptance correlated with lower depression levels, while avoidance coping linked to increased depressive symptoms and fatigue.
  • * The findings suggest that promoting emotional acceptance and reducing avoidance coping could help lessen cancer-related symptoms, emphasizing the need for professionals to address these aspects in post-treatment care for cancer survivors.
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Psychological and physical health are known to improve with emotion processing, which is becoming aware of bodily sensations, accepting them as information that can be translated into emotion concepts and expressing them symbolically and linguistically as emotions. Art therapy utilizes the visual arts for processing emotions to facilitate self-expression and communication with the goal of improving psychological wellbeing. The mental health of individuals coping with and recovering from cancer is known to benefit from art therapy.

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Objectives: This trial assessed the efficacy of an emotion-focused, modular, Internet-delivered adaptation of the Unified Protocol (UP) in improving cancer survivors' emotion regulation strategies.

Design: A two-arm randomized controlled trial (1:1) was used to compare the efficacy of two Internet-based interventions: UP-adapted CanCope Mind (CM) and lifestyle-focused active control CanCope Lifestyle (CL).

Methods: N = 224 cancer survivors randomized to CM or CL were assessed at baseline, between-modules, at post-intervention and 3-month follow-up on emotion regulation outcomes targeted by each CM module (Module 1: beliefs about emotions; Module 2: mindfulness; Module 3: cognitive reappraisal skills, catastrophizing, refocus on planning; Module 4: experiential avoidance).

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Storytelling has long been considered an effective means of communication, allowing the teller to process their emotions in light of particular life challenges. Effects on the listener also have been demonstrated to be beneficial, especially if the listener is faced with a similar life challenge. Less is known regarding the potential effects of storytelling on listening dyads and opportunities for joint processing following exposure to relevant stories.

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Background: Cancer survivors are vulnerable to experiencing symptoms of anxiety and depression and may benefit from accessible interventions focused on improving emotion regulation. CanCope Mind (CM) was developed as an internet-delivered intervention adapted from the Unified Protocol for Transdiagnostic Treatment of Emotional Disorders to improve emotion regulation and support the mental health of cancer survivors.

Objective: This protocol aims to provide an outline of the CanCope Study, a trial comparing the efficacy of a Unified Protocol-adapted internet-delivered intervention (CM) designed for cancer survivors compared with an active control condition-an internet-delivered healthy lifestyle intervention, CanCope Lifestyle (CL).

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Objective: Sleep disturbances are under-identified and under-treated in oncology settings, especially for underserved populations and those with psychiatric comorbidities. This study examined the prevalence and correlates of poor subjective sleep quality as well as clinical sleep recommendations among a socioeconomically and ethnically diverse population of patients with cancer referred for depression management.

Methods: Participants were 140 adults with cancer who screened positive for depression through routine, practice-based assessment with the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9 ≥ 8) and were referred to a study of collaborative care for depression.

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Objective: CanCope is an internet-delivered, cognitive-behavioural intervention adapted from the Unified Protocol for Transdiagnostic Treatment of Emotional Disorders to improve emotion regulation and support the mental health of cancer survivors. Four separate pilot studies evaluated each of CanCope's modules for (1) feasibility and participant satisfaction, and changes in (2) module-specific outcomes, and (3) global measures of emotion dysregulation and anxiety and depressive symptoms, from pre-to-post module delivery.

Methods: Eligible cancer survivors self-selected into one two-week online module designed to improve a specific aspect of emotion regulation ([1] understanding emotions, [2] mindfulness of emotions, [3] cognitive reappraisals, [4] challenging emotion-driven behaviours).

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[Embracing the Family] (Abrazo) is a 3-hr psychoeducational intervention designed for low-income informal caregivers who are cosurvivors of cancer. A rehabilitation-informed preventive intervention, Abrazo reflects the importance of family, culture, and socioeconomic background. A pilot study was conducted to inform a larger geographic implementation of Abrazo.

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: Insomnia and fatigue are common, although not inevitable, during breast cancer. This study is one of the first aiming to describe distinct trajectory classes of insomnia and fatigue symptoms, and their correlates, from diagnosis through treatment.: This longitudinal cohort study was conducted at a comprehensive cancer center and community oncology practices.

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We offer an interdisciplinary framework for understanding the expanded capacity for emotional awareness (EA) in humans relative to other animals, synthesizing work within computational neuroscience, evolutionary psychology, and comparative anatomy. We argue that disproportionate cortical expansion during human evolution reflects additional hierarchical levels of computational processing, allowing representation of multimodal regularities over longer timescales - affording abstract concept learning, internal simulation of distal future outcomes, and expanded working memory capacity. This allows for the ability to simulate emotions, learn emotion concepts, and manipulate them in working memory when deciding how to act.

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The objective of this study was to determine whether: (a) cancer-related coping profiles change across time; (b) coping profile transition types predict changes in depressive and physical symptoms. Latent transition analysis was conducted with repeated measures of seven cancer-related coping processes from 460 women recently diagnosed with breast cancer. In multilevel models, coping profile transition groups were entered as predictors of symptoms across 12 months.

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Purpose: Cancer diagnosis and treatment can generate substantial distress for both survivors and their family caregivers. The primary aim of this investigation is to test a model of dyadic interdependence in distress experienced by cancer survivors and their caregivers to determine if each influences the other.

Methods: To test this prediction, 209 Latinas with breast cancer and their family caregivers (dyads) were followed for 4 waves of assessment over the course of 6 months.

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