What is it about?

This research looked at how the emotional tone of our thoughts—whether positive, negative, or neutral—influences the impact of mind wandering on mood. We found that when minds wander, thoughts are more likely to be negative compared to when thoughts are focused on the present; this, in turn, predicts a more negative mood.

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Why is it important?

While the notion that mind wandering leads to unhappiness is widely accepted, this study offers a fresh perspective by revealing that it's the emotional tone of our thoughts that primarily drives this effect. In other words, it's not so much the act of mind wandering itself that influences our mood, but whether those wandering thoughts are positive or negative. This suggests that, rather than trying to reduce mind wandering, we might benefit more from fostering positive thoughts when our minds drift.

Perspectives

We hope this paper encourages further research examining how thought qualities shift between attentional states—from present focus to mind wandering. Although mind wandering has been extensively studied, the qualities of thoughts during these periods are seldom directly compared with those experienced during present-focused states, making it difficult to isolate the specific role mind wandering plays in outcomes like negative mood. Future research comparing thought qualities across these states could reveal dynamics unique to each, enhancing our understanding of their distinct impacts. Such insights might enable us to better harness the benefits of mind wandering—such as creativity and problem-solving—while mitigating its negative emotional effects.

Madeleine Gross
University of California Santa Barbara

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: When is a wandering mind unhappy? The role of thought valence., Emotion, October 2024, American Psychological Association (APA),
DOI: 10.1037/emo0001434.
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