Literature DB >> 16230028

Individual differences in the phenomenology of mental time travel: The effect of vivid visual imagery and emotion regulation strategies.

Arnaud D'Argembeau1, Martial Van der Linden.   

Abstract

It has been claimed that the ability to remember the past and the ability to project oneself into the future are intimately related. We sought support for this proposition by examining whether individual differences in dimensions that have been shown to affect memory for past events similarly influence the experience of projecting oneself into the future. We found that individuals with a higher capacity for visual imagery experienced more visual and other sensory details both when remembering past events and when imagining future events. In addition, individuals who habitually use suppression to regulate their emotions experienced fewer sensory, contextual, and emotional details when representing both past and future events, while the use of reappraisal had no effect on either kind of events. These findings are consistent with the view that mental time travel into the past and into the future relies on similar mechanisms.

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16230028     DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2005.09.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Conscious Cogn        ISSN: 1053-8100


  61 in total

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2.  Evidence for the default network's role in spontaneous cognition.

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4.  Drinking and future thinking: acute effects of alcohol on prospective memory and future simulation.

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6.  Similarities and differences in the default mode network across rest, retrieval, and future imagining.

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Review 8.  Let's Open the Decision-Making Umbrella: A Framework for Conceptualizing and Assessing Features of Impaired Decision Making in Addiction.

Authors:  Lucien Rochat; Pierre Maurage; Alexandre Heeren; Joël Billieux
Journal:  Neuropsychol Rev       Date:  2018-10-06       Impact factor: 7.444

9.  Toward an understanding of anticipatory pleasure deficits in schizophrenia: Memory, prospection, and emotion experience.

Authors:  Janelle M Painter; Ann M Kring
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  2016-03-07

10.  Global impairment of prospective memory following acute alcohol.

Authors:  Julie R Leitz; Celia J A Morgan; James A Bisby; Peter G Rendell; H Valerie Curran
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2009-05-14       Impact factor: 4.530

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