| Literature DB >> 24376427 |
Jessica R Andrews-Hanna1, Roselinde H Kaiser2, Amy E J Turner1, Andrew E Reineberg2, Detre Godinez1, Sona Dimidjian2, Marie T Banich3.
Abstract
A core aspect of human cognition involves overcoming the constraints of the present environment by mentally simulating another time, place, or perspective. Although these self-generated processes confer many benefits, they can come at an important cost, and this cost is greater for some individuals than for others. Here we explore the possibility that the costs and benefits of self-generated thought depend, in part, upon its phenomenological content. To test these hypotheses, we first developed a novel thought sampling paradigm in which a large sample of young adults recalled several recurring thoughts and rated each thought on multiple content variables (i.e., valence, specificity, self-relevance, etc.). Next, we examined multi-level relationships among these content variables and used a hierarchical clustering approach to partition self-generated thought into distinct dimensions. Finally, we investigated whether these content dimensions predicted individual differences in the costs and benefits of the experience, assessed with questionnaires measuring emotional health and wellbeing. Individuals who characterized their thoughts as more negative and more personally significant scored higher on constructs associated with Depression and Trait Negative Affect, whereas those who characterized their thoughts as less specific scored higher on constructs linked to Rumination. In contrast, individuals who characterized their thoughts as more positive, less personally significant, and more specific scored higher on constructs linked to improved wellbeing (Mindfulness). Collectively, these findings suggest that the content of people's inner thoughts can (1) be productively examined, (2) be distilled into several major dimensions, and (3) account for a large portion of variability in their functional outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: autobiographical; depression; mind-wandering; mindfulness; rumination
Year: 2013 PMID: 24376427 PMCID: PMC3843223 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00900
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Content variables.
| Content rating | Question | Scale |
|---|---|---|
| Self-relevance | I consider this thought to be highly self-relevant. | 0 to 10, from strongly disagree to strongly agree |
| Frequency | Lately, it seems that this thought has been on my mind a great deal. | 0 to 10, from strongly disagree to strongly agree |
| Importance/value | The topic of this thought is of great value or importance to me. | 0 to 10, from strongly disagree to strongly agree |
| Centrality | This thought contributes to my sense of self-identity. | 0 to 10, from strongly disagree to strongly agree |
| Valence | My own emotions pertaining to this thought are … | 0 to 10, from very negative to very positive |
| Intensity | The intensity of my emotions pertaining to this thought are … | 0 to 10, from not intense at all to very intense |
| Goal-orientation | This thought involves/involved reaching a particular goal of mine. | 0 to 10, from strongly disagree to strongly agree |
| Social-orientation | I consider this thought to involve/concern other people (i.e., an upcoming date, vacation with friends). | 0 to 10, from strongly disagree to strongly agree |
| Detail/specificity | I would characterize this thought as being tied to a highly detailed and specific event. | 0 to 10, from strongly disagree to strongly agree |
| Imagery | When I experience this thought, my mental imagery is … | 1 = Perfectly clear and as vivid as normal vision, 2 = Clear and reasonably vivid, 3 = Moderately clear and vivid, 4 = Vague and dim, 5 = No imagery at all, you only “know” that you were thinking of something |
| Perspective | When I experience this thought, I develop a mental image in which … | 1 = I “see” things from my own perspective (like I would in the real world), 2 = I “see” myself from another perspective, 3 = neither |
| Duration of topic | This thought concerns an event or a topic that lasted or will likely last … | 1 = many years, 2 = many months, 3 = a month, 4 = multiple days, 5 = an entire day, 6 = minutes to hours |
| Temporal orientation | This event took/will take place… | 1 = more than 3 years ago, 2 = within the past 3 years, 3 = within the past 365 days (a year’s time), 4 = within the past 30 days (a month’s time), 5 = within the past 7 days (a week’s time), 6 = yesterday, 7 = earlier today, 8 = later today, 9 = tomorrow, 10 = within the next 7 days (a week’s time), 11 = within the next 30 days (a month’s time), 12 = within the next 365 days (a year’s time), 13 = within the next 3 years, 14 = more than 3 years from now. |
| Certainty | I am certain that the event has taken or will take place for me | 0 to 10, from strongly disagree to strongly agree |
Constructs related to emotional health and wellbeing.
| Questionnaire | Subscale | Mean | SD | CFA latent construct | Factor loading |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MASQ | Loss of Interest | 16.13 | 4.53 | Depression/negative affect | 0.34* |
| MASQ | Low Positive Affect | 36.20 | 8.96 | Depression/negative affect | 0.37* |
| BDI | Total Score | 8.85 | 6.08 | Depression/negative affect | 0.73* |
| Trait PANAS | Negative | 17.92 | 5.66 | Depression/negative affect | 0.75* |
| RRS | Brooding | 10.59 | 3.36 | Rumination | 0.80* |
| RRS | Depression-related | 24.59 | 6.46 | Rumination | 0.97* |
| RRS | Reflection | 10.50 | 3.68 | Rumination | 0.57* |
| RRQ | Rumination | 40.69 | 8.18 | Rumination | 0.30* |
| FFMQ | Acting with awareness | 24.62 | 5.51 | Mindfulness | 0.72* |
| FFMQ | Describing | 26.90 | 5.99 | Mindfulness | 0.66* |
| FFMQ | Non-judging of experience | 27.49 | 5.46 | Mindfulness | 0.69* |
| FFMQ | Non-reactivity to inner experience | 22.28 | 3.98 | Mindfulness | 0.45* |
| FFMQ | Observing sensations, perceptions, thoughts, feelings | 25.73 | 4.60 | Mindfulness | -0.15 |