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Emotion. 2011 Oct;11(5):1105-11. doi: 10.1037/a0025301.

Negating in order to be negative: the relationship between depressive rumination, message content and negation processing.

Emotion (Washington, D.C.)

Dafna Haran, Nilly Mor, Ruth Mayo

Affiliations

  1. Department of Psychology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel.

PMID: 21942698 DOI: 10.1037/a0025301

Abstract

The current research explored the interaction between brooding, a maladaptive subtype of depressive rumination, and content valence, in a basic cognitive process of negation. Following presentation of positive and negative trait descriptions, phrased affirmatively or negatively (e.g., "Liz is/is not a smart person"), participants' associations were examined for congruency with the schema (e.g., "smart") or with its negation (e.g., "stupid"). We predicted that brooders' processing of negations would enhance the accessibility of negative content. Consistent with our prediction, brooders generated schema-congruent associations for negatively valenced schemas, but negation-congruent associations for positively valenced schemas, thus, maintaining negative content in both cases. In contrast, nonbrooders generated associations congruent with the negation regardless of schema valence. This processing pattern is suggestive of a possible pathway for negative content perseveration in rumination, and it attests to the context and person sensitivity of the negation process.

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