Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Linnen AM" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Interpersonal functioning in adolescent offspring of parents with bipolar disorder. Linnen AM, aan het Rot M, Ellenbogen MA, Young SN 18692905
CRDH
2 Chronic stress and stressful life events in the offspring of parents with bipolar disorder. Ostiguy CS, Ellenbogen MA, Linnen AM, Walker EF, Hammen C, Hodgins S 18814916
CRDH
3 High cortisol levels in the offspring of parents with bipolar disorder during two weeks of daily sampling. Ellenbogen MA, Santo JB, Linnen AM, Walker CD, Hodgins S 20148869
CRDH
4 Elevated daytime cortisol levels: a biomarker of subsequent major affective disorder? Ellenbogen MA, Hodgins S, Linnen AM, Ostiguy CS 21329985
CRDH
5 Acute intranasal oxytocin improves positive self-perceptions of personality. Cardoso C, Ellenbogen MA, Linnen AM 22012170
CRDH
6 Intranasal oxytocin and salivary cortisol concentrations during social rejection in university students. Linnen AM, Ellenbogen MA, Cardoso C, Joober R 22044077
CRDH
7 The acute effects of intranasal oxytocin on automatic and effortful attentional shifting to emotional faces. Ellenbogen MA, Linnen AM, Grumet R, Cardoso C, Joober R 22092248
PSYCHOLOGY
8 Intranasal oxytocin impedes the ability to ignore task-irrelevant facial expressions of sadness in students with depressive symptoms. Ellenbogen MA, Linnen AM, Cardoso C, Joober R 22902063
PSYCHOLOGY
9 Salivary cortisol and interpersonal functioning: an event-contingent recording study in the offspring of parents with bipolar disorder. Ellenbogen MA, Linnen AM, Santo JB, aan het Rot M, Hodgins S, Young SN 23131593
PSYCHOLOGY
10 Stress-induced negative mood moderates the relation between oxytocin administration and trust: evidence for the tend-and-befriend response to stress? Cardoso C, Ellenbogen MA, Serravalle L, Linnen AM 23768973
PSYCHOLOGY
11 Intranasal oxytocin attenuates the human acoustic startle response independent of emotional modulation. Ellenbogen MA, Linnen AM, Cardoso C, Joober R 25082371
CRDH

 

Title:Salivary cortisol and interpersonal functioning: an event-contingent recording study in the offspring of parents with bipolar disorder.
Authors:Ellenbogen MALinnen AMSanto JBaan het Rot MHodgins SYoung SN
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23131593?dopt=Abstract
Publication:
Keywords:
PMID:23131593 Category:Psychoneuroendocrinology Date Added:2019-06-07
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Centre for Research in Human Development, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec, Canada. mark.ellenbogen@concordia.ca

Description:

Salivary cortisol and interpersonal functioning: an event-contingent recording study in the offspring of parents with bipolar disorder.

Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2013 Jul;38(7):997-1006

Authors: Ellenbogen MA, Linnen AM, Santo JB, aan het Rot M, Hodgins S, Young SN

Abstract

Despite a large body of research in non-human primates, the relationship between naturalistic patterns of social behaviour and basal cortisol levels has been understudied in humans. The present study examined the relationship between patterns of interpersonal functioning and cortisol levels in 23 offspring of parents with bipolar disorder (BD), at high risk for the development of an affective disorder, and 22 offspring of parents with no affective disorder (controls) in late adolescence and young adulthood. Using event-contingent recording, participants rated their dominance, submissiveness, quarrelsomeness, and agreeableness in naturally occurring social interactions over 14 consecutive days and provided salivary cortisol twice daily in the afternoon over the same period. In the full sample, multilevel modelling analyses revealed that dominance was a significant positive predictor of afternoon basal cortisol levels, t(35)=2.58, p<0.05. Moreover, risk group (having a parent with BD or parents with no affective disorder) significantly interacted with mean levels of quarrelsomeness to predict afternoon cortisol levels, t(29)=2.06, p<0.05. Offspring of parents with BD who reported more frequent quarrelsome behaviours exhibited lower levels of afternoon cortisol relative to high-risk offspring reporting few quarrelsome behaviours and control offspring. The results are consistent with evidence that dominance is associated with high cortisol levels in an unstable environment, and suggest that quarrelsomeness among high risk youth contributes to altered hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal activity.

PMID: 23131593 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]





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