• Title of article

    Ruminative self-focus, negative life events, and negative affect

  • Author/Authors

    Nicholas J. Moberly، نويسنده , , Edward R. Watkins، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    1034
  • To page
    1039
  • Abstract
    Ruminative thinking is believed to exacerbate the psychological distress that follows stressful life events. An experience-sampling study was conducted in which participants recorded negative life events, ruminative self-focus, and negative affect eight times daily over one week. Occasions when participants reported a negative event were marked by higher levels of negative affect. Additionally, negative events were prospectively associated with higher levels of negative affect at the next sampling occasion, and this relationship was partially mediated by momentary ruminative self-focus. Depressive symptoms were associated with more frequent negative events, but not with increased reactivity to negative events. Trait rumination was associated with reports of more severe negative events and increased reactivity to negative events. These results suggest that the extent to which a person engages in ruminative self-focus after everyday stressors is an important determinant of the degree of distress experienced after such events. Further, dispositional measures of rumination predict mood reactivity to everyday stressors in a non-clinical sample.
  • Keywords
    Experience-samplingAffectRuminationStressorsDepression
  • Journal title
    Behaviour Research and Therapy
  • Serial Year
    2008
  • Journal title
    Behaviour Research and Therapy
  • Record number

    570413