6 research outputs found

    When the ends outweigh the means: mood and level of identification in depression.

    Get PDF
    Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tCopyright © 2011 Psychology Press, an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an Informa businessResearch in healthy controls has found that mood influences cognitive processing via level of action identification: happy moods are associated with global and abstract processing; sad moods are associated with local and concrete processing. However, this pattern seems inconsistent with the high level of abstract processing observed in depressed patients, leading Watkins (2008, 2010) to hypothesise that the association between mood and level of goal/action identification is impaired in depression. We tested this hypothesis by measuring level of identification on the Behavioural Identification Form after happy and sad mood inductions in never-depressed controls and currently depressed patients. Participants used increasingly concrete action identifications as they became sadder and less happy, but this effect was moderated by depression status. Consistent with Watkins' (2008) hypothesis, increases in sad mood and decreases in happiness were associated with shifts towards the use of more concrete action identifications in never-depressed individuals, but not in depressed patients. These findings suggest that the putatively adaptive association between mood and level of identification is impaired in major depression

    Processing mode causally influences emotional reactivity: distinct effects of abstract versus concrete construal on emotional response.

    Get PDF
    addresses: Mood Disorders Centre, School of Psychology, University of Exeter, UK. [email protected]: PMCID: PMC2672048types: Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tThis is a postprint of an article published in Emotion © 2008 copyright American Psychological Association. 'This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record.' Emotion is available online at: http://www.apa.org/pubs/journals/emo/index.aspxThree studies are reported showing that emotional responses to stress can be modified by systematic prior practice in adopting particular processing modes. Participants were induced to think about positive and negative scenarios in a mode either characteristic of or inconsistent with the abstract-evaluative mind-set observed in depressive rumination, via explicit instructions (Experiments 1 and 2) and via implicit induction of interpretative biases (Experiment 3), before being exposed to a failure experience. In all three studies, participants trained into the mode antithetical to depressive rumination demonstrated less emotional reactivity following failure than participants trained into the mode consistent with depressive rumination. These findings provide evidence consistent with the hypothesis that processing mode modifies emotional reactivity and support the processing-mode theory of rumination

    Atonement and personality The consequences of wrongdoing and the possibilities of their transformation

    No full text
    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Lending Division - LD:D55849/85 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    When the Ends Outweigh the Means: Mood and Level-of-construal in Depression

    No full text
    This is a postprint of an article whose final and definitive form has been published in Cognition and Emotion © 2011 Copyright Taylor & Francis; Cognition and Emotion is available online at http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/pcem20Research in healthy controls has found that mood influences cognitive processing via level-of-construal: happy moods are associated with global and abstract processing; sad moods are associated with local and concrete processing. However, this pattern seems inconsistent with the high level of abstract processing observed in depressed patients, leading Watkins (2008) to hypothesize that the association between mood and construal level is impaired in depression. We tested this hypothesis by measuring level-of-construal on the Behavioral Identification Form after happy and sad mood inductions in never-depressed controls and currently depressed patients. Participants used increasingly concrete construals as they became sadder, but this effect was moderated by depression status. Consistent with Watkins’ (2008) hypothesis, increases in sad mood were associated with shifts towards the use of more concrete construals in never-depressed individuals, but not in depressed patients. These findings suggest that the putatively adaptive association between sad mood and level-of-construal is impaired in major depression
    corecore