4.4 Article

Directed forgetting following mood induction in chronic posttraumatic stress disorder patients

Journal

JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 112, Issue 3, Pages 508-514

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/0021-843X.112.3.508

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Current research of posttrauma sequelae suggests that intrusive rather than avoidant-dissociative models more accurately represent the encoding processes of trauma cues. However, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is often conceptualized as a phasic phenomenon, altering between arousal and avoidance states. The failure to support a relationship between avoidant encoding style and PTSD may reflect this alteration. To explore this hypothesis, participants with PTSD and controls (no PTSD) completed an item-cued directed-forgetting task, following either a dissociative or a serenity (control) mood induction. Results suggested that, following the serenity induction, a standard directed-forgetting effect was observed. However, following the dissociation induction, this effect was not observed. The role of dissociation in impairing encoding via lack of selective rehearsal or source discrimination is discussed.

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