Repetitive thinking about negative experience, such as worry and rumination, is increasingly recognized as a transdiagnostic process underlying various forms of psychopathology including anxiety and depression. Recent theoretical models have emphasized the role of impaired attentional control and the habitual nature of negative biases in the development and maintenance of pathological repetitive thought. In this introduction, we provide a brief overview of these theories and of how the articles in the special series provide experimental evidence concerning these basic mechanisms underlying rumination and worry, and their relation to clinical dysfunction. Together the research summarized in these articles instantiates these theoretical frame...
Repetitive Negative Thinking (RNT) is assumed to be a transdiagnostic factor in depressive and anxie...
Repetitive negative thinking (RNT) is a transdiagnostic process involved in the risk, maintenance, a...
The transdiagnostic view of repetitive negative thinking (RNT) claims that different forms of RNT ar...
PublishedJournal Article© The Author(s) 2014. Repetitive thinking about negative experience, such as...
Repetitive thinking about negative experience, such as worry and rumination, is increasingly recogni...
Accumulating evidence suggests that repetitive negative thinking (RNT) is a transdiagnostic phenomen...
The current paper provides an updated review of repetitive negative thinking as a transdiagnostic pr...
Criticism of discrete classification systems for mental disorders has led to a focus on identificati...
Recent theoretical advances have emphasized the commonality between rumination and worry, often refe...
Worry and rumination are two types of Repetitive Negative Thinking (RNT) that have been shown to be ...
Attentional bias is commonly associated with emotional disorders. However, potential transdiagnostic...
Comorbidity among affective disorders is high. Rumination has been found to mediate cross-sectional ...
Comorbidity among affective disorders is high. Rumination has been found to mediate cross-sectional ...
Research suggests rumination and worry, which have typically been considered as strongly linked to d...
Extensive comorbidity exists between anxiety and mood disorders (Noyes, 2001). Forms of negative re...
Repetitive Negative Thinking (RNT) is assumed to be a transdiagnostic factor in depressive and anxie...
Repetitive negative thinking (RNT) is a transdiagnostic process involved in the risk, maintenance, a...
The transdiagnostic view of repetitive negative thinking (RNT) claims that different forms of RNT ar...
PublishedJournal Article© The Author(s) 2014. Repetitive thinking about negative experience, such as...
Repetitive thinking about negative experience, such as worry and rumination, is increasingly recogni...
Accumulating evidence suggests that repetitive negative thinking (RNT) is a transdiagnostic phenomen...
The current paper provides an updated review of repetitive negative thinking as a transdiagnostic pr...
Criticism of discrete classification systems for mental disorders has led to a focus on identificati...
Recent theoretical advances have emphasized the commonality between rumination and worry, often refe...
Worry and rumination are two types of Repetitive Negative Thinking (RNT) that have been shown to be ...
Attentional bias is commonly associated with emotional disorders. However, potential transdiagnostic...
Comorbidity among affective disorders is high. Rumination has been found to mediate cross-sectional ...
Comorbidity among affective disorders is high. Rumination has been found to mediate cross-sectional ...
Research suggests rumination and worry, which have typically been considered as strongly linked to d...
Extensive comorbidity exists between anxiety and mood disorders (Noyes, 2001). Forms of negative re...
Repetitive Negative Thinking (RNT) is assumed to be a transdiagnostic factor in depressive and anxie...
Repetitive negative thinking (RNT) is a transdiagnostic process involved in the risk, maintenance, a...
The transdiagnostic view of repetitive negative thinking (RNT) claims that different forms of RNT ar...