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Emotion Regulation as a Transdiagnostic Process in Psychopathology: In Memory of Susan Nolen-Hoeksema Chairs: Jutta Joormann and Sue Mineka Discussant: Sue Mineka This symposium commemorates the immense contributions of Dr. Susan Nolen-Hoeksema, following her tragic death in January. Her work was dedicated to improving our understanding of psychopathology by adopting a transdiagnostic perspective and by identifying underlying mechanisms of emotional disorders such as cognitive processes and emotion regulation difficulties. This symposium honors Dr. Nolen-Hoeksema with talks from her collaborators, past students, and other scholars whose research has been greatly inspired by her work. Amelia Aldao examines dysregulated goal pursuit in psychological disorders and its relation to emotion regulation. She presents data from a diary study showing that worry and rumination mediate the relation between symptoms of psychopathology and reduced goal pursuit. Lauren Alloy discusses the specificity of rumination to depression as well as the role of rumination and interpersonal stress in the emergence of gender differences in depression. Philippe Goldin presents data on neural correlates of rumination in social anxiety disorder and finds distinct neurocognitive processes associated with subcomponents of rumination. Finally, Jutta Joormann discusses the possibility of altering emotion regulation ability by modifying interpretive biases in depression. Sue Mineka will discuss the presented research and its relation to Susan NolenHoeksema’s influential work. Emotion Regulation and Goal Pursuit: Relationships to Psychopathology Amelia Aldao Ohio State University Dysregulated goal pursuit has been associated with various mental disorders (e.g., Johnson, 2005). Yet, the study of emotion regulation deficits in psychopathology has largely refrained from examining the implementation of regulation strategies within the context of pursuing personally meaningful goals (e.g., Aldao, 2013; c.f. Moberly & Watkins, 2010). In this diary study, 170 participants described personally meaningful goals that they sought to pursue each day for 5 consecutive days (702 goals). For each goal, participants rated the extent to which they: 1) considered it important, 2) experienced goal-interfering emotions, 3) used regulation strategies to manage such emotions, and 4) were able to achieve it. Goal importance was not associated with the likelihood of its achievement. Rather, low negative affect, high positive affect, and low use of worry/rumination were predictors of goal achievement. Importantly, no other emotion regulation strategies (e.g., reappraisal, acceptance, suppression) predicted goal achievement, suggesting that their usefulness might be a function of contextual factors. Symptoms of depression, social anxiety, eating disorders, and borderline personality predicted reduced likelihood of goal pursuit and these effects were mediated by negative affect and worry/rumination. Findings will be discussed within a contextual approach to the study of emotion regulation deficits in psychopathology. Stressors, Sex Differences, and Symptom Specificity Lauren B. Alloy1, Jonathan P. Stange1, Jessica L. Hamilton1, and Lyn Y. Abramson2 1Temple University, 2University of Wisconsin-Madison Objective: Individuals who ruminate in response to dysphoric mood are likely to experience increases in depression following stress. However, previous studies have not addressed (1) the specificity of these vulnerability-stress relations to depression following different types of stressors, and (2) whether these vulnerability-stress relations can account for the sex differences in depression that emerge during early adolescence. Method: Early adolescents (ages 12-13; N=256) completed measures of rumination and depressive and anxiety symptoms at baseline, and intervening life events, emotional maltreatment, peer relational victimization, and depressive and anxiety symptoms at 9-month follow-up. Results: Higher rumination interacted with several types of stressors to predict increases in symptoms of depression, but not anxiety. Rumination was more strongly associated with elevations in depressive symptoms following relational victimization events in girls than in boys. Additionally, dependent interpersonal stress mediated the sex difference in depressive symptoms that emerged at follow-up, and this indirect pathway was stronger among adolescents who ruminated. Conclusions: Rumination may confer specific vulnerability for depressive symptoms following recent stressors during early adolescence. Girls who ruminate may be particularly likely to experience increases in depression following relational victimization, and dependent interpersonal stressors may help account for girls’ greater depression risk during adolescence. Differential Neural Substrates of Brooding and Pondering Forms of Rumination in Patients with Social Anxiety Disorder Philippe Goldin & James Gross Stanford University Rumination is an important aberrant cognitive process in mood and anxiety disorders. In the context of social anxiety disorder (SAD), compared to healthy controls, patients report greater rumination. Nothing, however, is known about the differential neural substrates of two distinct forms of rumination considered maladaptive (brooding) and adaptive (pondering) in patients with SAD. Using the brooding and pondering subscales of the Rumination Response Scale (Treynor, Gonzalez, & Nolen-Hoeksema, 2003), we examined functional magnetic response imaging blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) responses related to brooding and pondering in 67 patients with SAD during a task that assessed cognitive reappraisal versus reacting to social anxiety related negative self-beliefs (NSBs). Results showed that significant associations of BOLD responses for cognitive reappraisal (vs. react) NSBs with greater brooding in a brain network implicating conceptual self-referential processing (medial prefrontal cortex), memory (hippocampus), and visual attention (lingual gyrus) processes, and with greater pondering in a brain network implicating cognitive control (dorsal and rostral anterior cingulate cortex, left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex), stimulus evaluation (ventromedial orbital frontal cortex), and memory (parahippocampus) processes. These findings highlight distinct neurocognitive processes for brooding and pondering. Changes in these brain networks with CBT and its relation to CBT outcome will be reported. Interpretive Bias Training in Depression: Effects on Emotion Regulation Jutta Joormann1 & Ian Gotlib2 1University of Miami 2Stanford University The most consistent bias in depression involves the negative interpretation of ambiguous stimuli. Previous research has linked interpretive biases to individual differences in stress reactivity and emotion regulation. This suggests that these biases may play a critical role in the maintenance of depressive disorders. Studies using interpretive bias training have shown that it is possible to experimentally induce and modify interpretive biases. This study extends on previous work by examining whether an interpretive bias training affects interpretation, memory, and stress responding in participants diagnosed with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). The results indicate that the training was effective in inducing the intended group differences in interpretive bias. Importantly, participants exhibited memory biases that corresponded to their training condition and reported differential responding to the stressor. These results suggest that interpretive biases in depression can be modified and that this training can result in corresponding changes in memory and improvements in stress reactivity. Findings from this study highlight the importance of future research on the relation among cognitive biases and on the possibility of modifying cognitive biases in emotional disorders.