Abstract

This paper reviews evidence on the neural basis of how positive mood states can modulate cognition, particularly during creative problem-solving. Studies performed over the past few decades demonstrate that individuals in a positive mood engage in a broader scope of attention, enhancing their access to distant and unusual semantic associations, and increasing task-shifting and problem-solving capacities. In this review, we summarize these behavioral studies; we then present recent findings on the changes in brain activation patterns that are induced by a positive mood when participants engage in problem-solving tasks and show how these relate to task performance. Additionally, we integrate findings on the neuromodulatory influence of positive mood on cognition as mediated by dopaminergic signaling in the prefrontal cortex and we describe how this system can go awry during pathological states of elevated mood as in mania. Finally, we describe current and future research directions using psychotherapeutic and real-time fMRI neurofeedback approaches to up-regulate positive mood and facilitate optimal creative cognitive performance. We conclude with some speculations on the clinical implications of this emerging area of research.

Highlights

  • Positive mood states—states of happiness—are the mental or emotional states of well-being characterized by positive emotions ranging from quiet contentment to intense joy

  • We found that healthy college students higher in assessed positive mood solved more Compound Remote Association (CRA) problems overall, and solved more CRA problems with insight, compared to college students lower in assessed positive mood

  • In an fMRI study using Compound Remote Associate (CRA) problems (Subramaniam et al, 2009), we found that participants who were higher in a positive mood state revealed greater ACC/medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) activity during a preparation period prior to problem onset when compared to participants lower in a positive mood

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Summary

Improving the neural mechanisms of cognition through the pursuit of happiness

This paper reviews evidence on the neural basis of how positive mood states can modulate cognition, during creative problem-solving. Studies performed over the past few decades demonstrate that individuals in a positive mood engage in a broader scope of attention, enhancing their access to distant and unusual semantic associations, and increasing task-shifting and problem-solving capacities. We summarize these behavioral studies; we present recent findings on the changes in brain activation patterns that are induced by a positive mood when participants engage in problem-solving tasks and show how these relate to task performance. We describe current and future research directions using psychotherapeutic and real-time fMRI neurofeedback approaches to up-regulate positive mood and facilitate optimal creative cognitive performance.

INTRODUCTION
Subramaniam and Vinogradov
Findings
SEVERAL CAVEATS
Full Text
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