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Looking on the bright side: Accessing benign meanings reduces worry.
174
Citations
39
References
2009
Year
Philosophy Of LanguageCognitive ScienceExcessive WorryEmotion RegulationBright SideSemantic InterpretationBreathing Focus TaskCognitive Behavioral InterventionCognitionSocial SciencesLexical SemanticsSemanticsLanguage StudiesAmbiguous EventsAnxiety DisordersLinguisticsPsychologyStress Management
This research investigated whether increasing access to benign outcomes of ambiguous events decreases excessive worry. Participants reporting high levels of worry were assigned either to practice in accessing benign meanings of threat-related homographs and emotionally ambiguous scenarios or to a control condition in which threatening or benign meanings were accessed with equal frequency. Results were assessed by use of a breathing focus task that involved categorizing the valence of thought intrusions before and after an instructed worry period and a test of working memory capacity available to participants while worrying. In comparison with the control group, the benign group reported fewer negative thought intrusions (as rated by both participants and an assessor) and less anxiety during the breathing focus task and showed greater residual working memory capacity while worrying. These findings suggest that enhancing access to benign outcomes is an effective method of reducing both the persistence of worry and its detrimental consequences.
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