نتایج جستجو برای: rumination

تعداد نتایج: 2889  

Journal: :Journal of anxiety disorders 2010
Keunyoung Yook Keun-Hyang Kim Shin Young Suh Kang Soo Lee

Intolerance of uncertainty (IU) can be defined as a cognitive bias that affects how a person perceives, interprets, and responds to uncertain situations. Although IU has been reported mainly in literature relating to worry and anxiety symptoms, it may be also important to investigate the relationship between IU, rumination, and depression in a clinical sample. Furthermore, individuals who are i...

Journal: :Social cognitive and affective neuroscience 2011
Marc G Berman Scott Peltier Derek Evan Nee Ethan Kross Patricia J Deldin John Jonides

Major depressive disorder (MDD) has been characterized by excessive default-network activation and connectivity with the subgenual cingulate. These hyper-connectivities are often interpreted as reflecting rumination, where MDDs perseverate on negative, self-referential thoughts. However, the relationship between connectivity and rumination has not been established. Furthermore, previous researc...

2000
Olivier Luminet Emmanuelle Zech Bernard Rimé Hugh Wagner

Emotional events are followed by recurrent thoughts (i.e., mental rumination), and talking about the event (i.e., social sharing of emotion). Factors that can account for variations in these consequences were examined (i.e., emotional intensity, the Five Factor Model, and two factors of alexithymia). In two samples, participants reported the most negative emotional event of the last months and ...

2018
Bettina K. Doering Antonia Barke Thilo Friehs Maarten C. Eisma

BACKGROUND Bereavement can result in severe mental health problems, including persistent, severe and disabling grief symptoms, termed complicated grief. Grief rumination (i.e., repetitive thought about the causes and consequences of the loss) is a malleable cognitive risk-factor in adjustment to bereavement. The Utrecht Grief Rumination Scale (UGRS) was recently developed to assess grief rumina...

2017
Tushna Vandevala Louisa Pavey Olga Chelidoni Nai-Feng Chang Ben Creagh-Brown Anna Cox

BACKGROUND The work demands of critical care can be a major cause of stress in intensive care unit (ICU) professionals and lead to poor health outcomes. In the process of recovery from work, psychological rumination is considered to be an important mediating variable in the relationship between work demands and health outcomes. This study aimed to extend our knowledge of the process by which IC...

2018
Jessica R. Peters David S. Chester Erin C. Walsh C. Nathan DeWall Ruth A. Baer

Background Understanding why individuals with borderline personality disorder (BPD) ruminate on prior provocations, despite its negative outcomes, is crucial to improving interventions. Provocation-focused rumination may be rewarding in the short term by amplifying anger and producing feelings of justification, validation, and increased energy, while reducing self-directed negative affect. If p...

Journal: :Psychological trauma : theory, research, practice and policy 2015
Kanako Taku Arnie Cann Richard G Tedeschi Lawrence G Calhoun

Posttraumatic growth (PTG), psychological growth as a result of personal struggle with trauma, is hypothesized to occur when a highly stressful life event, such as a natural disaster, forces people to reexamine their core beliefs. To the authors' knoweldge, the present study is the first investigation in Japanese people examining the role of core beliefs, intrusive rumination, and deliberate ru...

2003
Matthew S. Robinson Lauren B. Alloy

Research on cognitive theories of depression has identified negative cognitive styles and rumination in response to depressed mood as risk factors for depressive episodes. In addition, a general self-focusing style has been suggested to increase vulnerability to depression. The present study used a behavioral high-risk paradigm to test whether the interaction of negative cognitive styles and ru...

Journal: :Clinical psychology review 2013
Dawn Querstret Mark Cropley

Perseverative cognitions such as rumination and worry are key components of mental illnesses such as depression and anxiety. Given the frequent comorbidity of conditions in which rumination and worry are present, it is possible that they are underpinned by the same cognitive process. Furthermore, rumination and worry appear to be part of a causal chain that can lead to long-term health conseque...

Journal: :Cognitive, affective & behavioral neuroscience 2010
Rebecca E Cooney Jutta Joormann Fanny Eugène Emily L Dennis Ian H Gotlib

Rumination, or recursive self-focused thinking, has important implications for understanding the development and maintenance of depressive episodes. Rumination is associated with the worsening of negative mood states, greater affective responding to negative material, and increased access to negative memories. The present study was designed to use fMRI to examine neural aspects of rumination in...

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