Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Frequency, characteristics and functions of future‐oriented thoughts in daily life

421

Citations

29

References

2009

Year

TLDR

Future‑oriented cognition is increasingly studied, yet empirical data on its occurrence and nature in daily life remain scarce. The study aimed to record and rate future‑oriented thoughts in natural settings. Participants recorded future‑oriented thoughts in natural settings and rated their characteristics and functions. Future‑oriented thoughts are frequent, vary in abstraction, content, and function, and differ by temporal distance and affective valence: near‑future thoughts are more specific and action‑planning oriented, while positive thoughts are more frequent, specific, and visual. © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Abstract

Abstract Despite the growing interest in future‐oriented cognition in various areas of psychology, there is still little empirical data regarding the occurrence and nature of future‐oriented thoughts in daily life. In this study, participants recorded future‐oriented thoughts occurring in natural settings and rated their characteristics and functions. The results show that future‐oriented thoughts occur frequently in daily life and can take different representational formats (more or less abstract), embrace various thematic contents (e.g. work, relationships) and serve a range of functions (e.g. action planning, decision making). The functions and characteristics of thoughts differed according to their temporal distance, with thoughts referring to the near future being more specific and serving action planning to a greater extent than thoughts concerning the far future. The characteristics of future thoughts were also related to affective content, with positive thoughts being more frequent, more specific, and associated with more visual images than negative thoughts. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

References

YearCitations

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