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Schema-driven construction of future autobiographical traumatic events: the future is much more troubling than the past.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Rubin, DC
April 2014

Research on future episodic thought has produced compelling theories and results in cognitive psychology, cognitive neuroscience, and clinical psychology. In experiments aimed to integrate these with basic concepts and methods from autobiographical memory research, 76 undergraduates remembered past and imagined future positive and negative events that had or would have a major impact on them. Correlations of the online ratings of visual and auditory imagery, emotion, and other measures demonstrated that individuals used the same processes to the same extent to remember past and construct future events. These measures predicted the theoretically important metacognitive judgment of past reliving and future "preliving" in similar ways. On standardized tests of reactions to traumatic events, scores for future negative events were much higher than scores for past negative events. The scores for future negative events were in the range that would qualify for a diagnosis of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD); the test was replicated (n = 52) to check for order effects. Consistent with earlier work, future events had less sensory vividness. Thus, the imagined symptoms of future events were unlikely to be caused by sensory vividness. In a second experiment, to confirm this, 63 undergraduates produced numerous added details between 2 constructions of the same negative future events; deficits in rated vividness were removed with no increase in the standardized tests of reactions to traumatic events. Neuroticism predicted individuals' reactions to negative past events but did not predict imagined reactions to future events. This set of novel methods and findings is interpreted in the contexts of the literatures of episodic future thought, autobiographical memory, PTSD, and classic schema theory.

Duke Scholars

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DOI

Publication Date

April 2014

Publisher

American Psychological Association (APA)

Related Subject Headings

  • Young Adult
  • Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic
  • Memory, Episodic
  • Male
  • Life Change Events
  • Imagination
  • Humans
  • Forecasting
  • Female
  • Experimental Psychology
 

DOI

Publication Date

April 2014

Publisher

American Psychological Association (APA)

Related Subject Headings

  • Young Adult
  • Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic
  • Memory, Episodic
  • Male
  • Life Change Events
  • Imagination
  • Humans
  • Forecasting
  • Female
  • Experimental Psychology