CPS 3:4 with a special series on repetitive thinking now available online

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Clinical Psychological Science
  
 


 

Editor

ALAN E. KAZDIN

Yale University

 

Associate Editors

ARPANA AGRAWAL  

Washington University School of Medicine  

 

TYRONE D. CANNON  

Yale University   

  

EMILY A. HOLMES  

MRC Cognition and Brain Science Unit, Cambridge, UK   

  

JILL M. HOOLEY  

Harvard University 

  

KENNETH J. SHER  

University of Missouri

    
Full Editorial Board  

   


 

 
 
  

 

  

Volume 3, Number 4       


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The links below take you to the journal via the APS website. If not already logged in, you will be redirected to log-in using your last name (Garcia) and Member ID (81665) .

Empirical Articles

Threat of Death and Autobiographical Memory: A Study of Passengers From Flight AT236
Margaret C. McKinnon, Daniela J. Palombo, Anthony Nazarov, Namita Kumar, Wayne Khuu, and Brian Levine

Early Parenting Moderates the Association Between Parental Depression and Neural Reactivity to Rewards and Losses in Offspring
Autumn Kujawa, Greg H. Proudfit, Rebecca Laptook, and Daniel N. Klein

Security of Attachment to Spouses in Late Life: Concurrent and Prospective Links With Cognitive and Emotional Well-Being
Robert J. Waldinger, Shiri Cohen, Marc S. Schulz, and Judith A. Crowell

Response Time to Craving-Item Ratings as an Implicit Measure of Craving-Related Processes
Lisa J. Germeroth, Jennifer M. Wray, and Stephen T. Tiffany

 


Theoretical/Methodological/Review Article
RepetitiveThinkingSpecial Series: Mechanisms of Repetitive Thinking

The identification of repetitive thinking as a transdiagnostic process has made it a topic of interest to a wide range of researchers and practitioners. In this special section, introduced by Editor Alan E. Kazdin and by guest editors Rudi De Raedt, Paula T. Hertel, and Edward R. Watkins, the role of rumination in clinical dysfunction and therapeutic change, and rumination's relation to core psychological processes, is examined. The diverse articles included in this special series highlight the many lines of research examining rumination and worry and the benefit of using a procedural, transdiagnostic perspective when studying these cognitive phenomena.



Ruminative Thinking: Lessons Learned From Cognitive Training
Nilly Mor and Shimrit Daches

Attentional Control and Suppressing Negative Thought Intrusions in Pathological Worry
Elaine Fox, Kevin Dutton, Alan Yates, George A. Georgiou, and Elias Mouchlianitis

The Effects of Rumination Induction on Attentional Breadth for Self-Related Information
Maud Grol, Paula T. Hertel, Ernst H. W. Koster, and Rudi De Raedt

Examining the Relation Between Mood and Rumination in Remitted Depressed Individuals: A Dynamic Systems Analysis
Ernst H. W. Koster, Lin Fang, Igor Marchetti, Ulrich Ebner-Priemer, Peter Kirsch, Silke Huffziger, and Christine Kuehner
 
Stress-Induced Changes in Executive Control Are Associated With Depression Symptoms: Examining the Role of Rumination
Meghan E. Quinn and Jutta Joormann
 
Delineating the Role of Negative Verbal Thinking in Promoting Worry, Perceived Threat, and Anxiety
Colette R. Hirsch, Gemma Perman, Sarra Hayes, Claire Eagleson, and Andrew Mathews

For Ruminators, the Emotional Future Is Bound to the Emotional Past: Heightened Ruminative Disposition Is Characterized by Increased Emotional Extrapolation
Edward Watkins, Ben Grafton, Stacey Megan Weinstein, and Colin MacLeod


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Clinical Psychological Science is a publication of the Association for Psychological Science. Please contact APS by email or by telephone at +1 202.293.9300 with questions or comments.

 

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