Haakon Engen

Affiliations: 
2016-2018 MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit University of Cambridge, Cambridge, England, United Kingdom 
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Karl V, Engen H, Beck D, et al. (2024) The role of functional emotion circuits in distinct dimensions of psychopathology in youth. Translational Psychiatry. 14: 317
Souter NE, de Freitas A, Zhang M, et al. (2024) Default mode network shows distinct emotional and contextual responses yet common effects of retrieval demands across tasks. Human Brain Mapping. 45: e26703
Favre P, Kanske P, Engen H, et al. (2021) Decreased emotional reactivity after 3-month socio-affective but not attention- or meta-cognitive-based mental training: A randomized, controlled, longitudinal fMRI study. Neuroimage. 237: 118132
Engen H, Kanske P, Singer T. (2018) Endogenous emotion generation ability is associated with the capacity to form multimodal internal representations. Scientific Reports. 8: 1953
Engen HG, Kanske P, Singer T. (2016) The neural component-process architecture of endogenously generated emotion. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
Hildebrandt LK, McCall C, Engen HG, et al. (2016) Cognitive flexibility, heart rate variability, and resilience predict fine-grained regulation of arousal during prolonged threat. Psychophysiology
Engen HG, Smallwood J, Singer T. (2015) Differential impact of emotional task relevance on three indices of prioritised processing for fearful and angry facial expressions. Cognition & Emotion. 1-10
Engen HG, Singer T. (2015) Compassion-based emotion regulation up-regulates experienced positive affect and associated neural networks. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
Ruby FJ, Smallwood J, Engen H, et al. (2013) How self-generated thought shapes mood--the relation between mind-wandering and mood depends on the socio-temporal content of thoughts. Plos One. 8: e77554
Engen H, Kanske P. (2013) How working memory training improves emotion regulation: neural efficiency, effort, and transfer effects. The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society For Neuroscience. 33: 12152-3
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