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Kross E: When the self becomes other: toward an integrative understanding of the processes distinguishing adaptive self-reflection from rumination.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1167(1): 35-40, 2009.
Abstract: How can people adaptively analyze and "work through" negative feelings without ruminating? This paper will briefly review findings from an integrative program of research, which suggests that a critical factor determining whether people's attempts to adaptively reason about negative experiences succeed or fail is the type of self-perspective they adopt. That is, whether people analyze their feelings from a self-immersed or self-distanced perspective. The implications of shifting self-perspectives for subjective experience, autonomic nervous system reactivity, and neural activity are discussed.