Looking at or through rose-tinted glasses? Imagery perspective and positive mood.

We can imagine looking at ourselves (observer perspective) or through our own eyes (field perspective). Cognitive and clinical theories suggest that compared to field perspective, observer perspective imagery reduces emotional intensity, for example, of trauma memories. Tests of causality are lacking and less is known about perspective and positive emotion. Using contrasting experimental manipulations, participants imagined 100 positive descriptions from either (1) a field perspective or (2) an observer perspective, or (3) thought about their verbal meaning. Affect was more positive after field than observer imagery and verbal conditions, with mood deterioration within the latter two. Findings are the first to demonstrate causality of imagery perspective on emotion. Further, the results demonstrate that imagining positive events from one's own perspective is critical to improving positive affect. Treatment implications include promoting field imagery to facilitate a more rose-tinted view of positive events.

[1]  E. Eich,et al.  Vantage Point in Traumatic Memory , 2004, Psychological science.

[2]  U. Neisser,et al.  Point of view in personal memories , 1983, Cognitive Psychology.

[3]  David C. Rubin,et al.  Emotion and vantage point in autobiographical , 2006 .

[4]  D. Schacter,et al.  Remembering the past to imagine the future: the prospective brain , 2007, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.

[5]  E. Holmes,et al.  Mental imagery and emotion: a special relationship? , 2005, Emotion.

[6]  I. Hyman,et al.  The Role of Mental Imagery in the Creation of False Childhood Memories , 1996 .

[7]  Alishia D. Williams,et al.  Cognitive avoidance of intrusive memories: recall vantage perspective and associations with depression. , 2007, Behaviour research and therapy.

[8]  W. Kuyken,et al.  Facets of autobiographical memory in adolescents with major depressive disorder and never‐depressed controls , 2006, Cognition & emotion.

[9]  J. Joormann,et al.  Memory accessibility, mood regulation, and dysphoria: difficulties in repairing sad mood with happy memories? , 2004, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[10]  J. Robinson,et al.  Field and observer modes of remembering. , 1993, Memory.

[11]  Jonathan A. Slemmer,et al.  Picture Yourself at the Polls , 2007, Psychological science.

[12]  C. MacLeod,et al.  Cognitive vulnerability to emotional disorders. , 2005, Annual review of clinical psychology.

[13]  E. Holmes,et al.  The causal effect of mental imagery on emotion assessed using picture-word cues. , 2008, Emotion.

[14]  D. Watson,et al.  Development and validation of brief measures of positive and negative affect: the PANAS scales. , 1988, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[15]  S. Kosslyn,et al.  Neural foundations of imagery , 2001, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.

[16]  A. Mathews,et al.  Induced emotional interpretation bias and anxiety. , 2000, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[17]  E. Holmes,et al.  Prospective and positive mental imagery deficits in dysphoria. , 2008, Behaviour research and therapy.

[18]  K. Markman,et al.  A Reflection and Evaluation Model of Comparative Thinking , 2003, Personality and social psychology review : an official journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.

[19]  R. Bryant,et al.  Keeping memories at an arm's length: vantage point of trauma memories. , 2007, Behaviour research and therapy.

[20]  E. Holmes,et al.  Positive interpretation training: effects of mental imagery versus verbal training on positive mood. , 2006, Behavior therapy.

[21]  E. Phelps,et al.  Neural mechanisms mediating optimism bias , 2007, Nature.

[22]  M. Conway Sensory-perceptual episodic memory and its context: autobiographical memory. , 2001, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.

[23]  S. Kosslyn,et al.  Intuitions and introspections about imagery: the role of imagery experience in shaping an investigator's theoretical views , 2003 .

[24]  P. Fossati,et al.  Episodic autobiographical memory in depression: Specificity, autonoetic consciousness, and self-perspective , 2006, Consciousness and Cognition.

[25]  Eric Eich,et al.  Vantage point in episodic memory , 2002, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[26]  D. Clark,et al.  A cognitive model of posttraumatic stress disorder. , 2000, Behaviour research and therapy.

[27]  H. Healy,et al.  The Effect of Imageability and Predicability of Cues in Autobiographical Memory , 1999, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[28]  E. Higgins,et al.  Automatic activation of self-discrepancies and emotional syndromes: when cognitive structures influence affect. , 1987, Journal of personality and social psychology.