APS
29th APS Annual Convention · 2017
"Depressive Rumination" Decomposed: Emotion-Independent Effects
- Azra Jahanitabesh
Iran Institute of Cognitive Science - Brittany Cardwell
University of Otago - Kumari Valentine
University of Otago - Jamin Halberstadt
University of Otago
Abstract
To investigate how rumination—an analytic type of self-focused attention often co-occurring with depression— affects mood, participants underwent happy, sad, and neutral mood manipulations, after which they either ruminated or were distracted. Results suggest that rumination per se contributes to negative mood and does not merely exacerbate a depressed person’s mood.
Social Cognition