4.2 Article

Emotional mental imagery generation during spontaneous future thinking: relationship with optimism and negative mood

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SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00426-021-01501-w

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资金

  1. Cambridge Commonwealth
  2. European and International Trust
  3. Forrest Research Foundation
  4. UK Medical Research Council [SUAG/003/RG91365, SUAG/049/G101400]
  5. Australian Research Council [DE200101570, DP170104533, FL170100167]
  6. Medical Research Council (United Kingdom) [MC-A060-5PR50]
  7. Lupina Foundation
  8. OAK Foundation [OCAY-18-442]
  9. Swedish Research Council [2017-00957]
  10. Australian Research Council [DE200101570] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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This study investigated the relationship between optimism and mental imagery, and found that individuals who generate positive mental imagery when spontaneously thinking about the future tend to be more optimistic and experience lower levels of negative mood.
Optimism is known to buffer against negative mood. Thus, understanding the factors that contribute to individual variation in optimism may inform interventions for mood disorders. Preliminary evidence suggests that the generation of mental imagery-based representations of positive relative to negative future scenarios is related to optimism. This study investigated the hypothesis that an elevated tendency to generate positive relative to negative mental imagery during spontaneous future thinking would be associated with reduced negative mood via its relationship to higher optimism. Participants (N = 44) with varied levels of naturally occurring negative mood reported current levels of optimism and the real-time occurrence and characteristics of spontaneous thoughts during a sustained attention computer task. Consistent with hypotheses, higher optimism statistically mediated the relationship between a higher proportional frequency of positive relative to negative mental imagery during spontaneous future thinking and lower negative mood. Further, the relationship between emotional mental imagery and optimism was found for future, but not past, thinking, nor for verbal future or past thinking. Thus, a greater tendency to generate positive rather than negative imagery-based mental representations when spontaneously thinking about the future may influence how optimistic one feels, which in turn may influence one's experience of negative mood.

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