Abstract

Background: Mental imagery (MI) may play a key role in the development of various mental disorders in adolescents. Adolescence is known to be a fragile life period, in which acceptance by one’s favored peer group is extremely important, and social rejection is particularly painful. This is the first pilot study investigating MI and its relationship to social pain (SP). Method: A sample of 80 adolescents (14–20 years; 75.3% female) completed a web-based quasi-experimental design about the contents and characteristics of their spontaneous positive and negative MI and associated emotions, and were asked to complete the Social Pain Questionnaire, the Becks Depression Inventory and the Social Phobia Inventory. Results: A higher score of SP was significantly associated with increased fear, sadness, and feelings of guilt, and less control over negative MI. Characteristics of negative MI were more precisely predicted by SP scores than depression- and social anxiety scores. Adolescents with higher SP-scores more often reported negative images including social situations and were more likely to perceive negative images in a combination of field-and observer perspectives than adolescents with lower SP scores. Conclusion: SP-sensitivity seems to be linked to unique characteristics of negative MI, which reveals the strong emotional impact of social exclusion in youths. The results do not allow causal conclusions to be drawn, but raise questions about previous studies comparing each imagery perspective individually.

Highlights

  • Adolescence is known to be a fragile life period in which acceptance by one’s preferred peer group is more important than in other phases, and social rejection is especially painful [1,2]

  • No study has investigated the controllability of Mental imagery (MI), we exploratively investigated whether or not the experienced controllability is linked to social pain (SP) scores

  • Since different attachment styles appear to be associated with different levels of sensitivity to social pain [49] and since the present study shows a relationship between the characteristics of mental images and sensitivity to SP, attachment styles may influence the appearance and characteristics of mental images

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Summary

Introduction

Adolescence is known to be a fragile life period in which acceptance by one’s preferred peer group is more important than in other phases, and social rejection is especially painful [1,2]. Social emotions are emotions which a person has towards another person and they help acting communally and caring Among these social emotions, a distinction is made between social-evaluative and social-relational emotions (in addition to positive and negative emotions). Adolescence is known to be a fragile life period, in which acceptance by one’s favored peer group is extremely important, and social rejection is painful. This is the first pilot study investigating MI and its relationship to social pain (SP). Characteristics of negative MI were more precisely predicted by SP scores than depression- and social anxiety scores

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