Self-concept organization and mental control:
Renaud, J. M., & McConnell, A. R. (2002). Organization of the self-concept
and the suppression of self-relevant thoughts. Journal of Experimental Social
Psychology, 38, 79-86.
The rebound effect associated with thought suppression has been found
following attempts at suppressing both novel stimuli and stereotypical thoughts.
However, research examining the suppression of self-relevant thoughts has been
less successful in demonstrating the rebound effect. A potential factor that
has not yet been fully explored in research on thought suppression is how different
types of distracter thoughts may influence the ability to suppress unwanted
thoughts. One type of distracter people may use while attempting to suppress
unwanted self-relevant thoughts is information related to other aspects of their
lives. To the extent that these other aspects are more likely to be associated
in memory with the unwanted thought, rebound should be more likely to occur.
Thus, we expected and found that people lower in self-complexity (i.e., those
with fewer self-aspects that are more interrelated with one another) revealed
greater rebound following thought suppression that involved self-relevant distracting
thoughts than people greater in self-complexity. Implications of these findings
for thought suppression, self-complexity, depression, and the experience of
affect are discussed.
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