Article

The role of rumination, attentional biases and stress in psychological distress

Details

Citation

Morrison R & O'Connor R (2008) The role of rumination, attentional biases and stress in psychological distress. British Journal of Psychology, 99 (2), pp. 191-209. https://doi.org/10.1348/000712607X216080

Abstract
This experimental study examines the relationship between rumination and attentional bias. Additionally, the study aims to determine, within a diathesis-stress framework, whether rumination or attentional bias (or both) can prospectively predict psychological distress. Eighty-one participants completed selected measures of rumination and psychological distress at time one, in addition to experimental manipulations of rumination and mood and measures of mood and attentional bias at time two. Seventy-three participants (90% follow-up) completed final measures of stress and psychological distress approximately three weeks later. In combination with negative mood, inducing rumination decreased positive attentional bias, whilst inducing distraction increased positive attentional bias. Rumination and stress interacted to predict change in psychological distress. Negative attentional bias showed a trend towards interacting with rumination and stress to predict dysphoria. The findings supported the proposed diathesis-stress models. In addition, a causal relationship between rumination and positive attentional bias has been empirically established for the first time.

Keywords
rumination; distress; suicidal; attentional bias; students; stress; diathesis-stress; Cognition disorders; Cognitive psychology; Stress (Psychology)

Journal
British Journal of Psychology: Volume 99, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date31/05/2008
Publication date online31/12/2010
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/958
PublisherBritish Psychological Society
ISSN0007-1269