Feeling
Angry? Do This
Kevin Hogan,
Psy.D.
Author of 19 books,
Professional Speaker, Doctor of Psychology

Why does putting our
feelings into words -- talking with a therapist or friend,
writing in a journal -- help us to feel better? A new brain
imaging study by UCLA psychologists reveals why verbalizing
our feelings makes our sadness, anger and pain less
intense.
Another study, with the same participants and three of the
same members of the research team, combines modern neuroscience
with ancient Buddhist teachings to provide the first neural
evidence for why "mindfulness" -- the ability to live in the
present moment, without distraction -- seems to produce a
variety of health benefits.
What are Scientists Seeing?
When people see a photograph of an angry or fearful face,
they have increased activity in a region of the brain called
the amygdala, which serves as an alarm to activate a cascade of
biological systems to protect the body in times of danger.
Scientists see a robust amygdala response even when they show
such emotional photographs subliminally, so fast a person can't
even see them.
But does seeing an angry face and simply calling it an angry
face change our brain response? The answer is yes, according to
Matthew D. Lieberman, UCLA associate professor of psychology
and a founder of social cognitive neuroscience.
"When you attach the word 'angry,' you see a decreased
response in the amygdala," said Lieberman, lead author of the
study, which appears in the current issue of the journal
Psychological Science.
The study showed that while the amygdala was less active
when an individual labeled the feeling, another region of the
brain was more active: the right ventrolateral prefrontal
cortex. This region is located behind the forehead and eyes and
has been associated with thinking in words about emotional
experiences. It has also been implicated in inhibiting behavior
and processing emotions, but exactly what it contributes has
not been known.
"What we're suggesting is when you start thinking in words
about your emotions --labeling emotions -- that might be part
of what the right ventrolateral region is responsible for,"
Lieberman said.
If a friend or loved one is sad or angry, getting the person
to talk or write may have benefits beyond whatever actual
insights are gained. These effects are likely to be modest,
however, Lieberman said.
"We typically think of language processing in the left side
of the brain; however, this effect was occurring only in this
one region, on the right side of the brain," he said. "It's
rare to see only one region of the brain responsive to a
high-level process like labeling emotions."
Many people are not likely to realize why putting their
feelings into words is helpful.
"If you ask people who are really sad why they are writing
in a journal, they are not likely to say it's because they
think this is a way to make themselves feel better," Lieberman
said. "People don't do this to intentionally overcome their
negative feelings; it just seems to have that effect. Popular
psychology says when you're feeling down, just pick yourself
up, but the world doesn't work that way. If you know you're
trying to pick yourself up, it usually doesn't work --
self-deception is difficult. Because labeling your feelings
doesn't require you to want to feel better, it doesn't have
this problem."
How Did the Study Work?
Thirty people, 18 women and 12 men between ages of 18 and
36, participated in Lieberman's study at UCLA's
Ahmanson-Lovelace Brain Mapping Center.
They viewed images of individuals making different emotional
expressions. Below the picture of the face they either saw two
words, such as "angry" and "fearful," and chose which emotion
described the face, or they saw two names, such as "Harry" and
"Sally," and chose the gender-appropriate name that matched the
face.
Lieberman and his co-authors -- UCLA assistant professor of
psychology Naomi Eisenberger, former UCLA psychology
undergraduate Molly Crockett, former UCLA psychology research
assistant Sabrina Tom, UCLA psychology graduate student
Jennifer Pfeifer and Baldwin Way, a postdoctoral fellow in
Lieberman's laboratory -- used functional magnetic resonance
imaging to study subjects' brain activity.
"When you attach the word 'angry,' you see a decreased
response in the amygdala," Lieberman said. "When you attach the
name 'Harry,' you don't see the reduction in the amygdala
response.
"When you put feelings into words, you're activating this
prefrontal region and seeing a reduced response in the
amygdala," he said. "In the same way you hit the brake when
you're driving when you see a yellow light, when you put
feelings into words, you seem to be hitting the brakes on your
emotional responses."
As a result, an individual may feel less angry or less
sad.
This is ancient wisdom," Lieberman said. "Putting our
feelings into words helps us heal better. If a friend is sad
and we can get them to talk about it, that probably will make
them feel better."
The right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex undergoes much of
its development during a child's preteen and teenage years. It
is possible that interaction with friends and family during
these years could shape the strength of this brain region's
response, but this is not yet established, Lieberman said.
One benefit of therapy may be to strengthen this brain
region. Does therapy lead to physiological changes in the right
ventrolateral prefrontal cortex? Lieberman, UCLA psychology
professor Michelle Craske and their colleagues are studying
this question.
How do Buddhist teachings combine with modern
neuroscience?
Combining Buddhist Teachings and Modern Neuroscience
After the participants left the brain scanner, 27 of them
filled out questionnaires about "mindfulness."
Mindfulness meditation, which is very popular in Southeast
Asia and elsewhere, originates from early Buddhist teachings
dating back some 2,500 years, said David Creswell, a research
scientist with the Cousins Center for Psychoneuroimmunology at
the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at
UCLA.
Mindfulness is a technique in which one pays attention to
his or her present emotions, thoughts and body sensations, such
as breathing, without passing judgment or reacting. An
individual simply releases his thoughts and "lets it
go."
"One way to practice mindfulness meditation and pay
attention to present-moment experiences is to label your
emotions by saying, for example, 'I'm feeling angry right now'
or 'I'm feeling a lot of stress right now' or 'this is joy' or
whatever the emotion is," said Creswell, lead author of the
study, which will be featured in an upcoming issue of
Psychosomatic Medicine, a leading international medical journal
for health psychology research.
"Thinking, 'this is anger' is what we do in this study,
where people look at an angry face and say, 'this is anger,'"
Lieberman noted.
Creswell said Lieberman has now shown in a series of studies
that simply labeling emotions turns down the amygdala alarm
center response in the brain that triggers negative
feelings.
Creswell, who conducted the mindfulness research as an
advanced graduate student of psychology at UCLA, said
mindfulness meditation is a "potent and powerful therapy that
has been helping people for thousands of years."
What Else Does Mindfulness Help?
Previous studies have shown that mindfulness meditation is
effective in reducing a variety of chronic pain conditions,
skin disease, stress-related health conditions and a variety of
other ailments, Creswell said.
Creswell and his UCLA colleagues -- Lieberman, Eisenberger
and Way -- found that during the labeling of emotions, the
right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex was activated, which
seems to turn down activity in the amygdala. They then compared
participants' responses on the mindfulness questionnaire with
the results of the labeling study.
"We found the more mindful you are, the more activation you
have in the right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and the less
activation you have in the amygdala," Creswell said. "We also
saw activation in widespread centers of the prefrontal cortex
for people who are high in mindfulness. This suggests people
who are more mindful bring all sorts of prefrontal resources to
turn down the amygdala. These findings may help explain the
beneficial health effects of mindfulness meditation, and
suggest, for the first time, an underlying reason why
mindfulness meditation programs improve mood and health.
"The right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex can turn down the
emotional response you get when you feel angry," he said. "This
moves us forward in beginning to understand the benefits of
mindfulness meditation. For the first time, we're now applying
scientific principles to try to understand how mindfulness
works.
"This is such an exciting study because it brings together
the Buddha's teachings -- more than 2,500 years ago, he talked
about the benefits of labeling your experience -- with modern
neuroscience," Creswell said. "Now, for the first time since
those teachings, we have shown there is actually a neurological
reason for doing mindfulness meditation. Our findings are
consistent with what mindfulness meditation teachers have
taught for thousands of years."
The research was supported by the National Institute of
Mental Health, the article is from this week's press
release...
Dr. Hogan's website is kevinhogan.com
Kevin Hogan
Network 3000 Publishing
3432 Denmark #108
Eagan, MN 55123
(612) 616-0732
Biography:
Kevin Hogan is the author of nineteen
books. He is best known for his international best selling
book, The Psychology of Persuasion: How to Persuade Others
to Your Way of Thinking.
In the past decade he has become the Body Language Expert
and Unconscious Influence Expert to ABC, Fox, The BBC, The
New York Times, The New York Post and dozens of
popular magazines like Forbes,Investors Business
Daily,InTouch, First for Women,
Success!, and Cosmopolitan.
He has become the go-to resource for analyzing key White
House figures.
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