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"Prideful Apathy" : a phenomenological-psychopathological study of emotion engagement and regulation tasks
ID Oblak, Aleš (Author), ID Rigler, Sara (Author), ID Hudnik Korošec, Liam (Author), ID Bon, Jurij (Author)

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Abstract
Background/Objectives: Emotion dysregulation is central to many psychiatric disorders. Laboratory-based tasks designed to assess emotion processing and regulation often rely on standardized affective stimuli whose ecological validity remains unclear. We contextualize this study in our broader research program of neurophenomenological reflection of standard paradigms in experimental cognitive psychology. Methods: This study investigates the lived experience of 27 patients with affective disorders as they performed a cognitive-affective task combining working memory demands with exposure to negative emotional images. Phenomenological interviews were used to collect data on their experience of the task. Results: We identified three key experiential domains: whether the stimuli are capable of eliciting a spontaneous emotional response, voluntary construction of an emotional responses, and its temporal dynamics. Patients reported on two alterations in affectivity that are associated with dysregulation: (a) affective enchantment, characterized by intense emotions combined with superstitious appraisal; and (b) disintwinement (a sense of detachment and emotional blunting). Emotional responses exhibited complex unfolding across moment-to-hour timescales, sometimes persisting and blending across trials (impressionability), reflecting clinical phenomena such as rumination. Additionally, patients employed a range of explicit and implicit regulation strategies, many acquired through therapy or long-term coping. Conclusions: Our findings reveal the limitations of rapid, static image-based paradigms in eliciting authentic and spontaneous affectivity in clinical populations, highlighting the need for more ecologically valid experimental designs. Furthermore, inclusion of reports on such subtle affective states as vital feelings in laboratory-based experimental assessments is necessary for a comprehensive understanding of altered phenomenology of affectivity in affective disorders.

Language:English
Keywords:anxiety, depression, ecological validity, emotion processing, emotion regulation, magical thinking, phenomenology
Work type:Article
Typology:1.01 - Original Scientific Article
Organization:MF - Faculty of Medicine
PEF - Faculty of Education
Publication status:Published
Publication version:Version of Record
Year:2024
Number of pages:15 str.
Numbering:Vol. 16, iss. 1
PID:20.500.12556/RUL-178933 This link opens in a new window
UDC:616.89
ISSN on article:2076-3425
DOI:10.3390/brainsci16010080 This link opens in a new window
COBISS.SI-ID:266876419 This link opens in a new window
Publication date in RUL:02.02.2026
Views:271
Downloads:83
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Record is a part of a journal

Title:Brain sciences
Shortened title:Brain sci.
Publisher:MDPI AG
ISSN:2076-3425
COBISS.SI-ID:519954201 This link opens in a new window

Licences

License:CC BY 4.0, Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Link:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Description:This is the standard Creative Commons license that gives others maximum freedom to do what they want with the work as long as they credit the author.

Secondary language

Language:Slovenian
Keywords:anksioznost, depresija, ekološka veljavnost, obdelava čustev, regulacija čustev, magično mišljenje, fenomenologija

Projects

Funder:ARIS - Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency
Project number:31-ARIS_RSF_TM

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