Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by Crossref.
Kuhl, Julius
Quirin, Markus
and
Koole, Sander L.
2015.
Being Someone: The Integrated Self as a Neuropsychological System.
Social and Personality Psychology Compass,
Vol. 9,
Issue. 3,
p.
115.
Kent, Martha
Rivers, Crystal
and
Wrenn, Glenda
2015.
Goal-Directed Resilience in Training (GRIT): A Biopsychosocial Model of Self-Regulation, Executive Functions, and Personal Growth (Eudaimonia) in Evocative Contexts of PTSD, Obesity, and Chronic Pain.
Behavioral Sciences,
Vol. 5,
Issue. 2,
p.
264.
Tops, Mattie
Montero-Marín, Jesús
and
Quirin, Markus
2016.
Recent Developments in Neuroscience Research on Human Motivation.
Vol. 19,
Issue. ,
p.
283.
Düsing, Rainer
Tops, Mattie
Radtke, Elise Leila
Kuhl, Julius
and
Quirin, Markus
2016.
Relative frontal brain asymmetry and cortisol release after social stress: The role of action orientation.
Biological Psychology,
Vol. 115,
Issue. ,
p.
86.
Bolders, Anna C.
Tops, Mattie
Band, Guido P. H.
and
Stallen, Pieter Jan M.
2017.
Perceptual Sensitivity and Response to Strong Stimuli Are Related.
Frontiers in Psychology,
Vol. 8,
Issue. ,
Tops, Mattie
Quirin, Markus
Boksem, Maarten A.S.
and
Koole, Sander L.
2017.
Large-scale neural networks and the lateralization of motivation and emotion.
International Journal of Psychophysiology,
Vol. 119,
Issue. ,
p.
41.
Quirin, Markus
Fröhlich, Stephanie
and
Kuhl, Julius
2018.
Implicit self and the right hemisphere: Increasing implicit self‐esteem and implicit positive affect by left hand contractions.
European Journal of Social Psychology,
Vol. 48,
Issue. 1,
p.
4.
Keefer, Laurie
2018.
Behavioural medicine and gastrointestinal disorders: the promise of positive psychology.
Nature Reviews Gastroenterology & Hepatology,
Vol. 15,
Issue. 6,
p.
378.
Quirin, Markus
and
Kuhl, Julius
2018.
The Self-Access Form.
Journal of Individual Differences,
Vol. 39,
Issue. 1,
p.
1.
Radtke, Elise L.
Düsing, Rainer
Kuhl, Julius
Tops, Mattie
and
Quirin, Markus
2020.
Personality, Stress, and Intuition: Emotion Regulation Abilities Moderate the Effect of Stress-Dependent Cortisol Increase on Coherence Judgments.
Frontiers in Psychology,
Vol. 11,
Issue. ,
Kuhl, Julius
Quirin, Markus
and
Koole, Sander L.
2021.
Vol. 8,
Issue. ,
p.
1.
Tops, Mattie
IJzerman, Hans
and
Quirin, Markus
2021.
The Handbook of Personality Dynamics and Processes.
p.
125.
Quirin, Markus
and
Kuhl, Julius
2022.
The concert of personality: Explaining personality functioning and coherence by personality systems interactions.
European Journal of Personality,
Vol. 36,
Issue. 3,
p.
274.
Kästner, Anne
and
Petzke, Frank
2024.
Personality systems interactions theory: an integrative framework complementing the study of the motivational and volitional dynamics underlying adjustment to chronic pain.
Frontiers in Pain Research,
Vol. 5,
Issue. ,
Theodoratou, Maria
and
Argyrides, Marios
2024.
Neuropsychological Insights into Coping Strategies: Integrating Theory and Practice in Clinical and Therapeutic Contexts.
Psychiatry International,
Vol. 5,
Issue. 1,
p.
53.
Petri-Romão, Papoula
Engen, Haakon
Rupanova, Anna
Puhlmann, Lara
Zerban, Matthias
Neumann, Rebecca J.
Malyshau, Aliaksandr
Ahrens, Kira F.
Schick, Anita
Kollmann, Bianca
Wessa, Michèle
Walker, Henrik
Plichta, Michael M.
Reif, Andreas
Chmitorz, Andrea
Tuescher, Oliver
Basten, Ulrike
Kalisch, Raffael
and
Moreira, Paulo Alexandre Soares
2024.
Self-report assessment of Positive Appraisal Style (PAS): Development of a process-focused and a content-focused questionnaire for use in mental health and resilience research.
PLOS ONE,
Vol. 19,
Issue. 2,
p.
e0295562.
Target article
A conceptual framework for the neurobiological study of resilience
Related commentaries (35)
Adding network approaches to a neurobiological framework of resilience
Animals can tell us more
Appreciating methodological complexity and integrating neurobiological perspectives to advance the science of resilience
Are positive appraisals always adaptive?
Beyond resilience: Positive mental health and the nature of cognitive processes involved in positive appraisals
Broadening the definition of resilience and “reappraising” the use of appetitive motivation
Careful operationalization and assessment are critical for advancing the study of the neurobiology of resilience1
Cognitive trade-offs and the costs of resilience
Do we know how stressed we are?
Does a positive appraisal style work in all stressful situations and for all individuals?
Heterogeneity of cognitive-neurobiological determinants of resilience
Integration of negative experiences: A neuropsychological framework for human resilience
Knowledge and resilience
Personality science, resilience, and posttraumatic growth
Phenotypic programming as a distal cause of resilience
Positive appraisal style: The mental immune system?1
Quantifying resilience: Theoretical or pragmatic for translational research?
Reappraisal and resilience to stress: Context must be considered
Rediscovering confidence as a mechanism and optimism as a construct
Resilience and psychiatric epidemiology: Implications for a conceptual framework
Resilience is more about being flexible than about staying positive
Resilience: Mediated by not one but many appraisal mechanisms
Resilience: The role of accurate appraisal, thresholds, and socioenvironmental factors1
Rethinking reappraisal: Insights from affective neuroscience
Social ecological complexity and resilience processes
Stability through variability: Homeostatic plasticity and psychological resilience
The challenges of forecasting resilience
The importance of not only individual, but also community and society factors in resilience in later life
The self in its social context: Why resilience needs company
The temporal dynamics of resilience: Neural recovery as a biomarker
The value of “negative” appraisals for resilience. Is positive (re)appraisal always good and negative always bad?
Toward a translational neuropsychiatry of resilience
What do we know about positive appraisals? Low cognitive cost, orbitofrontal-striatal connectivity, and only short-term bolstering of resilience
When at rest: “Event-free” active inference may give rise to implicit self-models of coping potential
“If you want to understand something, try to change it”: Social-psychological interventions to cultivate resilience
Author response
Advancing empirical resilience research