Publication | Closed Access
Memory Accessibility, Mood Regulation, and Dysphoria: Difficulties in Repairing Sad Mood With Happy Memories?
351
Citations
42
References
2004
Year
Negative Mood InductionAffective NeurosciencePsychologySocial SciencesMood RegulationEmotion RegulationHappy MemoriesMood SymptomMemoryCognitive SciencePsychiatryDepressionPsychiatric DisorderSubsequent RuminationMemory AccessibilityMood SpectrumAutobiographical MemoriesMedicineEmotionPsychopathologyPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
Recent studies have suggested that mood-incongruency effects are due to mood-regulatory processes, in which people retrieve positive memories to repair negative moods. In Study 1, the authors investigated whether dysphoria influences the accessibility of autobiographical memories following a positive or a negative mood induction combined with subsequent rumination or distraction. The results showed a mood-repair effect for nondysphoric but not for dysphoric participants following rumination. In Study 2, participants were asked to either distract themselves or to recall positive autobiographical memories after a negative mood induction. Whereas nondysphoric participants' mood improved under both conditions, dysphoric participants' mood improved only after distraction. These results suggest that dysphoria is associated with a reduced ability to use mood-incongruent recall to repair sad moods.
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