Journal article
The Bright Side of Being Blue: Depression as an Adaptation for Analyzing Complex Problems
Abstract
Depression is the primary emotional condition for which help is sought. Depressed people often report persistent rumination, which involves analysis, and complex social problems in their lives. Analysis is often a useful approach for solving complex problems, but it requires slow, sustained processing, so disruption would interfere with problem solving. The analytical rumination hypothesis proposes that depression is an evolved response to …
Authors
Andrews PW; Thomson JA
Journal
Psychological Review, Vol. 116, No. 3, pp. 620–654
Publisher
American Psychological Association (APA)
Publication Date
7 2009
DOI
10.1037/a0016242
ISSN
0033-295X
Associated Experts
Fields of Research (FoR)
Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Adaptation, PsychologicalAffectAntidepressive AgentsArousalAttentionAwarenessBiological EvolutionDepressionDepressive Disorder, MajorHumansMemory, Short-TermModels, PsychologicalPrefrontal CortexProblem SolvingPsychomotor PerformancePsychotherapySerotoninStress, PsychologicalSynaptic TransmissionThinking