Reflecting on negative emotional experiences can be adaptive but it can also maintain or intensify detrimental emotional states. Which factors determine whether reflection can have one consequence or another is unclear. This study focused on two research programs that have concentrated on this topic in the last decades: processing-mode theory (PMT) and self-distancing theory (SDT). The article described and contrasted both programs and their findings. The promising results that PMT and SDT have achieved in identifying the differences between the forms of adaptive and maladaptive reflection are highlighted. Likewise, the disconcerting contradictions observed between both programs that make integrating the findings difficult are indicated. Th...
A previous time series study showed that rapidly repeating a single word version of a negative self-...
Extant research suggests that self-distancing facilitates adaptive self-reflection of negative emoti...
Some studies have suggested that a decrease in immersion (egocentric perspective on personal experie...
Reflecting on negative emotional experiences can be adaptive but it can also maintain or intensify d...
Both common intuition and findings from multiple areas of research suggest that when faced with dist...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72416/1/j.1749-6632.2009.04545.x.pd
© British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies 2019. Background: The cognitive ...
addresses: Mood Disorders Centre, School of Psychology, University of Exeter, UK. e.r.watkins@exeter...
Thinking about a negative event from a self-distanced (vs. self-immersed) perspective is associated ...
textDepression research demonstrates that self-focused processing, such as rumination, causes and ma...
Depression’s cost on society is estimated to rank 4th in the world, with symptoms that are disruptiv...
Repetitive negative thinking (RNT) has been identified as a key maintaining process of emotional dif...
Ruminative thinking – repetitively fixating on symptoms of distress and the causes and consequences ...
Recent studies have questioned the idea of rumination as a unitary dysfunctional process and identif...
A previous time series study showed that rapidly repeating a single word version of a negative self-...
Extant research suggests that self-distancing facilitates adaptive self-reflection of negative emoti...
Some studies have suggested that a decrease in immersion (egocentric perspective on personal experie...
Reflecting on negative emotional experiences can be adaptive but it can also maintain or intensify d...
Both common intuition and findings from multiple areas of research suggest that when faced with dist...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72416/1/j.1749-6632.2009.04545.x.pd
© British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies 2019. Background: The cognitive ...
addresses: Mood Disorders Centre, School of Psychology, University of Exeter, UK. e.r.watkins@exeter...
Thinking about a negative event from a self-distanced (vs. self-immersed) perspective is associated ...
textDepression research demonstrates that self-focused processing, such as rumination, causes and ma...
Depression’s cost on society is estimated to rank 4th in the world, with symptoms that are disruptiv...
Repetitive negative thinking (RNT) has been identified as a key maintaining process of emotional dif...
Ruminative thinking – repetitively fixating on symptoms of distress and the causes and consequences ...
Recent studies have questioned the idea of rumination as a unitary dysfunctional process and identif...
A previous time series study showed that rapidly repeating a single word version of a negative self-...
Extant research suggests that self-distancing facilitates adaptive self-reflection of negative emoti...
Some studies have suggested that a decrease in immersion (egocentric perspective on personal experie...