نتایج جستجو برای: rumination activity

تعداد نتایج: 1136934  

Journal: :Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry 2002
E Watkins R G Brown

BACKGROUND Major depression is associated with cognitive deficits, particularly those requiring central executive functioning. Depressed patients also tend to focus on and think about their symptoms and problems ("ruminate") more than non-depressed controls. Although an association has been found between rumination and impaired performance on a central executive processing task, the causal rela...

Journal: :Cognition & emotion 2011
Jeffrey A Ciesla Julia W Felton John E Roberts

Recent studies have found that rumination functions as a catalyst of cognitive vulnerability to depression. Specifically, these studies have reported synergistic effects between rumination and negative cognitive content (beliefs and attitudes), such that rumination amplifies the association between negative cognitive content and depression (Ciesla & Roberts, 2002, 2007; Robinson & Alloy, 2003)....

Journal: :Journal of abnormal child psychology 2012
Brandon E Gibb Marie Grassia Lindsey B Stone Dorothy J Uhrlass John E McGeary

The goal of the current study was to examine the role of brooding rumination in children at risk for depression. We found that children of mothers with a history of major depression exhibited higher levels of brooding rumination than did children of mothers with no depression history. Examining potential mechanisms of this risk, we found no evidence for shared genetic influences (BDNF or 5-HTTL...

2008
Dr Edward

Depressive rumination, defined as “behaviour and thoughts that focus one’s attention on one’s depressive symptoms and on the implications of these symptoms” (Nolen-Hoeksema, 1991, p.569) has been identified as a core process in the onset and maintenance of depression. Rumination is elevated in both currently and formerly depressed patients and tends to be elevated in women relative to men, i.e....

Journal: :Autism : the international journal of research and practice 2015
Cara E Pugliese Matthew S Fritz Susan W White

This study (a) examined the role of anger rumination as a mediator of the relation between social anxiety and the experience of anger, hostility, and aggression, in the general population, and (b) evaluated the degree to which the presence of autism spectrum disorder characteristics moderates the indirect influence of anger rumination. We then explored whether social cognition and perseveration...

Journal: :iranian journal of cognition and education 2014
hossain ghamari givi moslem abbasi parviz porzor

objectives: the aim of this study was to examine the prevalence of anger rumination and its relationship with coping strategies and assertiveness in students of mohaghegh ardebili university. methods: the present research was a descriptive correlational study. the study population consisted of all students enrolled in the academic year 1390-91 (n = 8344). in the first step, to determine the pre...

2014
Ueli Braun Theresa Tschoner Michael Hässig

BACKGROUND Eating and rumination variables were recorded in ten healthy cows over 5 days (group A) to generate reference intervals for comparison with the same variables recorded in ten cows in advanced pregnancy from ten days prepartum to ten days postpartum (group B). A pressure sensor integrated into the noseband of a halter recorded individual chewing movements. The endpoints calculated on ...

Journal: :International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology 2009
Søren Bo Andersen Roger Anthony Moore Louise Venables Philip Joseph Corr

EEG coherence and EEG power response were recorded as 63 participants engaged in one of three experimental conditions: 'personal rumination', 'nominal rumination', and 'baseline counting'. The rumination conditions were separated by a neutral (counting) task to eliminate neural carry-over effects. For personal rumination, participants spent 2 min ruminating about something in their life about w...

2009
Blair E. Wisco Susan Nolen-Hoeksema

Rumination is a response to distress in which individuals focus repetitively on their feelings and the causes and consequences of those feelings. When induced to ruminate, dysphorics exhibit more negative mood and recall more negative memories, but these effects are not seen in nondysphorics. This pattern of results could be due to trait-like differences between dysphoric and nondysphoric indiv...

Journal: :Journal of affective disorders 2005
Filip Raes Dirk Hermans J Mark G Williams Koen Demyttenaere Bernard Sabbe Guido Pieters Paul Eelen

BACKGROUND Depressed individuals display a deficit in effectively solving social problem situations (e.g., []). Recent research suggests that rumination may interfere with such effective problem-solving (e.g., []). However, little is known, as yet, about the mechanisms that are underlying this relation between rumination and poor problem-solving. The present study investigated the role of reduc...

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