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For Ruminators, the Emotional Future Is Bound to the Emotional Past
Author(s) -
Edward Watkins,
Ben Grafton,
Stacey Megan Weinstein,
Colin MacLeod
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
clinical psychological science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.74
H-Index - 47
eISSN - 2167-7034
pISSN - 2167-7026
DOI - 10.1177/2167702614566816
Subject(s) - rumination , psychology , disposition , expectancy theory , developmental psychology , extrapolation , cognitive psychology , cognition , social psychology , mathematical analysis , mathematics , neuroscience
ArticleCopyright © 2015 The Authors / Association for Psychological ScienceProcessing mode theory (Watkins, 2008) proposes that rumination is characterized by abstract processing that involves increased thinking about the implications of emotional events, which derives the prediction that heightened ruminative disposition will be associated with elevated emotional extrapolation from current events when formulating future expectancies. To test this, we used a novel Emotional Extrapolation Assessment Task (EEAT) that measured individual differences in the degree to which the emotional tone of initial events influence relative expectancy for subsequent events that are emotionally consistent or inconsistent with this initial event. In Experiment 1, ruminative disposition was associated with increased self-reported expectancy for negative subsequent events relative to positive subsequent events. As predicted, in Experiment 2, heightened ruminative disposition was associated with increased emotional extrapolation, assessed using a comprehension latency performance-based measure.Royal Society Travel Awar

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