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Self-reflection and the temporal focus of the wandering mind
Authors:Smallwood Jonathan  Schooler Jonathan W  Turk David J  Cunningham Sheila J  Burns Phebe  Macrae C Neil
Affiliation:aDepartment of Social Neuroscience, Max Planck Institute of Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany;bDepartment of Psychology, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA;cDepartment of Psychology, University of Aberdeen, UK
Abstract:Current accounts suggest that self-referential thought serves a pivotal function in the human ability to simulate the future during mind-wandering. Using experience sampling, this hypothesis was tested in two studies that explored the extent to which self-reflection impacts both retrospection and prospection during mind-wandering. Study 1 demonstrated that a brief period of self-reflection yielded a prospective bias during mind-wandering such that participants’ engaged more frequently in spontaneous future than past thought. In Study 2, individual differences in the strength of self-referential thought — as indexed by the memorial advantage for self rather than other-encoded items — was shown to vary with future thinking during mind-wandering. Together these results confirm that self-reflection is a core component of future thinking during mind-wandering and provide novel evidence that a key function of the autobiographical memory system may be to mentally simulate events in the future.
Keywords:Autobiographical memory   Daydreaming   Self   Mental time travel   Prospective thought   Stimulus independent thought   Task unrelated thought   Mind-wandering
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