中文版

Hui Xie

2024-03-11 15:03:00 From:Institute for Brain Research and Rehabilitation of SCNU Views:


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1.Introduction

XIE Hui, PhD, Special associate researcher and postdoctoral fellow (supervisor: Professor Weng Xuchu), Institute for Brain Research and Rehabilitation, South China Normal University. During the period of postgraduate studies, Hui adopted behavioral, electroencephalography and non-invasive brain stimulation technologies to conduct series of studies, including: 1) negative memory bias of depressed individuals; 2) neural mechanisms of voluntary forgetting; 3) key brain regions involved in emotion regulation and memory control. Hui’s current research interests mainly focus on: 1) voluntary forgetting of social feedback; 2) the impact of emotion regulation on memory control and the associated neural mechanisms; and 3) cognitive regulation training based on emotional memory.

 

Email: xiehui@scnu.edu.cn; xh0422@foxmail.com

 

2.Education

  • Doctor: 2019. 9–2023. 8; The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China. Major: Cognitive Psychology. Supervisor: Dr. HU Xiaoqing.

  • Master: 2014. 9–2017. 6; Shenzhen University, China.

    Major: Applied Psychology. Supervisor: Prof. ZHANG Dandan.

  • Bachelor: 2010. 9–2014. 6; Tianjin Foreign Studies University, China.

    Major: Public Administration. 


3.Work experience

  •     2017. 7–2019. 8: Research Assistant, Shenzhen University.

 

4.Publications (# co-first authorship; *corresponding author)

1.  Luo, Y., Wang, R., Xie, H*., & He, Z*. (2024). The interplay between memory control and emotion regulation. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. Online. Doi: 10.1111/nyas.15107.

2.  Xie, H., Lin, X., Hu, W., & Hu, X. (2023). Emotion regulation promotes forgetting of negative social feedback: Behavioral and EEG evidence. Acta Psychologica Sinica, 55(6): 905–919.

3.   Xie, H., Mo, L., Li, S., Liang, J., Hu, X., & Zhang, D. (2022). Aberrant social feedback processing and its impact on memory, social evaluation, and decision-making among individuals with depressive symptoms. Journal of Affective Disorders, 300, 366–376.

4. Li, S#., Xie, H#., Zheng, Z., Chen, W., Xu, F., Hu, X., & Zhang, D (2022). The causal role of the bilateral ventrolateral prefrontal cortices on emotion regulation of social feedback. Human Brain Mapping. 43(9), 2898–2910.

5.  Xie, H., Hu, X., Mo, L., & Zhang, D. (2021). Forgetting positive social feedback is difficult: ERP evidence in a directed forgetting paradigm. Psychophysiology, 58(5), e13790.

6.  Xie, H., Chen, Y., Lin, Y., Hu, X., & Zhang, D. (2020). Can’t forget: disruption of the right prefrontal cortex impairs voluntary forgetting in a recognition test. Memory, 28(1), 60–69.

7.  Xie, H#., Jiang, D#., & Zhang, D. (2018). Individuals with depressive tendencies experience difficulty in forgetting negative material: two mechanisms revealed by ERP data in the directed forgetting paradigm. Scientific Reports, 8(1), 1113.

8.  Zhang, D#., Xie, H#., He Z., Wei Z., & Gu R. (2018). Impaired working memory updating for emotional stimuli in depressed patients. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 12, 65.

9.  Zhang, D#., Xie, H#., Liu, Y., & Luo, Y. (2016). Neural correlates underlying impaired memory facilitation and suppression of negative material in depression. Scientific Reports, 6, 37556.