Abstract

A core aspect of human cognition involves overcoming the constraints of the present environment by mentally simulating another time, place, or perspective. Although these self-generated processes confer many benefits, they can come at an important cost, and this cost is greater for some individuals than for others. Here we explore the possibility that the costs and benefits of self-generated thought depend, in part, upon its phenomenological content. To test these hypotheses, we first developed a novel thought sampling paradigm in which a large sample of young adults recalled several recurring thoughts and rated each thought on multiple content variables (i.e., valence, specificity, self-relevance, etc.). Next, we examined multi-level relationships among these content variables and used a hierarchical clustering approach to partition self-generated thought into distinct dimensions. Finally, we investigated whether these content dimensions predicted individual differences in the costs and benefits of the experience, assessed with questionnaires measuring emotional health and wellbeing. Individuals who characterized their thoughts as more negative and more personally significant scored higher on constructs associated with Depression and Trait Negative Affect, whereas those who characterized their thoughts as less specific scored higher on constructs linked to Rumination. In contrast, individuals who characterized their thoughts as more positive, less personally significant, and more specific scored higher on constructs linked to improved wellbeing (Mindfulness). Collectively, these findings suggest that the content of people’s inner thoughts can (1) be productively examined, (2) be distilled into several major dimensions, and (3) account for a large portion of variability in their functional outcomes.

Highlights

  • INTRODUCTION “You are today where your thoughts have brought you; you will be tomorrow where your thoughts take you.” – James Allen (1864–1912), author

  • We focused on individual differences in depressive symptoms as an important marker of poor emotional wellbeing because (1) major depressive disorder (MDD) is the leading cause of disability worldwide (World Health Organization, 2008), (2) depressive symptoms predict significant distress and impairment at subclinical levels of severity (Judd et al, 1998), and (3) individuals with a current or past history of depression often exhibit intrusive self-generated thoughts focused on negative self-schema (Beck, 1967; Watkins, 2008)

  • Depressed individuals commonly exhibit overgeneral autobiographical memories (Williams et al, 2007; Watkins, 2008), the present results demonstrate that overgeneral styles of thinking were more strongly related to individual differences in Rumination than to Depression/Negative Affect

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Summary

Introduction

INTRODUCTION “You are today where your thoughts have brought you; you will be tomorrow where your thoughts take you.” – James Allen (1864–1912), author. The content regulation hypothesis proposes that self-generated thoughts are beneficial for individuals who are able to regulate the content of the experience to positive or productive topics (Smallwood and Andrews-Hanna, 2013) In line with this hypothesis, we predicted that individuals who primarily engaged in www.frontiersin.org. Depressed individuals “overgeneralize” based on single instances (Beck, 1967) and exhibit overgeneral autobiographical memories that tend to be associated with a broad range of unconstructive consequences (Williams et al, 2007; Watkins, 2008) It is neither clear whether overgeneral memory applies to the types of self-generated thoughts that occur in daily life, nor whether these characteristics are driven by the affective symptoms of depression or the repetitive styles of thinking associated with the disorder. We hypothesized that individuals with higher levels of depressive symptoms would exhibit thought content characterized as more negative, more self-focused and – to the degree that they ruminate – less specific

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