Project Summary / Abstract
The loss of a spouse is a profoundly stressful life event associated with significantly increased morbidity
and mortality risk in bereaved spouses. Bereavement stress is often manifested in emotional reactions such as
despair, dejection, guilt, and other symptoms of depression. Acute suffering stemming from the above
reactions is highly prevalent, especially during the early stages of bereavement (i.e., within the first 1-2 years),
with substantial dysphoria in everyday life activities often persisting even longer (up to 4 years or more post-
loss). Bereavement is also associated with low respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), a psychophysiological
biomarker of adaptive cardiac vagal tone and a strong predictor of all-cause mortality. Emotion regulation skills
represent an ideal target for psychological intervention to promote healthy coping in bereaved spouses.
Despite clear evidence that the emotional stress of bereavement is associated with negative health outcomes,
existing cognitive-behavioral intervention approaches for bereavement are frequently overall ineffective;
involve training in disparate intervention strategies, obscuring knowledge about which strategies are most
effective; impose substantial time/cost burdens; and—crucially—operate via neurobiological mechanisms that
remain to be elucidated. The objective of this proposal is to use an experimental medicine approach to
evaluate the basic psychological, psychophysiological, and neural mechanisms underlying a novel cognitive
emotion regulation intervention aimed at improving psychological outcomes (i.e., reducing depressive
symptoms and grief rumination) in bereaved spouses. Cognitive reappraisal (i.e. the ability to modify the
trajectory of an emotional response by thinking about and appraising emotional information in an alternative,
more adaptive way) represents a highly promising target for psychological intervention in bereavement.
Reappraisal can be operationalized via two primary tactics: psychological distancing (i.e. appraising an
emotional stimulus as an objective, impartial observer) and reinterpretation (i.e. imagining a better outcome
than what initially seemed apparent). The proposed project builds upon promising preliminary work to
investigate the effectiveness and underlying neurobiological mechanisms of a novel, five-session cognitive
reappraisal intervention in bereaved spouses. Recently-bereaved participants (i.e. approximately 6 months
post-spousal loss) will be randomly assigned to receive training in either distancing or reinterpretation, with five
sessions occurring every 1-3 days, with longitudinal collection of affective, psychophysiological, and functional
magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data. The proposed study aims to mechanistically relate changes in
psychological, psychophysiological, and neural function during a novel emotion regulation intervention never
before implemented in this stressed, high risk group.