4.3 Article

Imagining emotional future events in PTSD: clinical and neurocognitive correlates

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13415-023-01121-4

Keywords

Posttraumatic stress disorder; Future thinking; Overgenerality

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This study aimed to characterize emotional future thinking in PTSD and identify clinical and neurocognitive profiles associated with alterations in the level of detail in narratives of imagined future events. The results showed that individuals with current and past PTSD generated fewer internal details in their narratives compared to those without PTSD. Severity of PTSD symptoms was inversely associated with production of internal details, with a relatively weaker association for intrusion symptoms. Only relational verbal memory was associated with production of internal details.
Emotional future thinking serves important functions related to goal pursuit and emotion regulation but has been scantly studied in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The current study sought to characterize emotional future thinking in PTSD and to identify clinical and neurocognitive profiles associated with potential alterations in the level of detail in narratives of imagined future events. Fifty-eight, trauma-exposed, war-zone veterans, who were classified into current PTSD, past PTSD, and no-PTSD groups, were asked to vividly imagine future events in response to positive and negative cue words occurring in the near and distant future. These narratives were scored for internal (i.e., pertaining to the main event) and external (i.e., tangential to the main event) details. Participants also performed neurocognitive tasks of generative ability, working memory, and relational verbal memory. Linear mixed modeling revealed that the current and past PTSD groups generated fewer internal details than the no-PTSD group across positive and negative cue words and across temporal proximity. Partial least squares analysis revealed that symptom severity for all PTSD clusters was inversely associated with production of internal details, albeit with the association relatively weaker for intrusion symptoms. Among the neurocognitive tasks, only relational verbal memory was associated with production of internal details. These findings suggest, as predicted, that functional avoidance may underlie reduced detail generation but also point to potential additional mechanisms to be further investigated. That future event simulation remains overgeneral even when PTSD symptoms abate highlights the importance of addressing alterations in future thinking in this population.

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