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In three experiments we examined depressed individuals' mental control abilities and strategies. Experiment 1 revealed that although depressed college students were initially successful in suppressing negative material, they eventually experienced a resurgence of unwanted negative thoughts. Analysis of subjects' stream-of-consciousness reports indicated that this resurgence was associated with the use of negative thoughts as distracters from the unwanted item. In Experiment 2 depressed subjects acknowledged that positive distracters were more effective than negative ones in suppressing negative thoughts. This acknowledgement suggests that depressed subjects in Experiment 1 did not deliberately focus on negative distracters but that those thoughts automatically occurred because they were highly accessible. Experiment 3 demonstrated that depressed subjects' use of positive distracters could be increased somewhat when we provided such distracters and made them easily accessible. Taken together, the findings suggest that depression involves an enhanced accessibility of interconnected negative thoughts that can undermine mental control efforts.
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Richard M. Wenzlaff
University of Kansas
Daniel M. Wegner
Dartmouth College
David W. Roper
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
The University of Texas at San Antonio
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Wenzlaff et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a16768f4021539c0f655aae — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1037//0022-3514.55.6.882