Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
International

Talking To Yourself May Help Combat Stress

IANS, 28 Jul, 2017 05:46 PM
    Talking to yourself in the third person during stressful events may help control emotions without any added mental effort, a study has found.
     
     
    "Essentially, we think referring to yourself in the third person leads people to think about themselves more similar to how they think about others, and you can see evidence for this in the brain," said Jason Moser, associate professor at Michigan State University in the US.
     
     
    "That helps people gain a tiny bit of psychological distance from their experiences, which can often be useful for regulating emotions," he said.
     
     
    Researchers conducted two experiments. In one experiment participants viewed neutral and disturbing images and reacted to them in the first and third person while their brain activity was monitored by an electroencephalograph.
     
     
     
    The team found that when reacting to the disturbing photos such as a man holding a gun to their heads, the emotional brain activity decreased within a second when they referred to themselves in the third person.
     
     
     
     
    Researchers also measured participants' effort-related brain activity and found that using the third person was no more effortful than using first person self-talk.
     
     
    "This bodes well for using third-person self-talk as an on-the-spot strategy for regulating one's emotions, as many other forms of emotion regulation, such as mindfulness and thinking on the bright side, require considerable thought and effort," Moser said.
     
     
    In the other experiment, participants reflected on painful experiences from their past using first and third person language while their brain activity was measured using functional magnetic resonance imaging.
     
     
    Similar to the first experiment researchers found that participants' displayed less activity in a brain region that is commonly implicated in reflecting on painful emotional experiences when using third person self-talk, suggesting better emotional regulation.
     
     
     
     
    Further, third person self-talk required no more effort- related brain activity than using first person, researchers said.
     
     
    "What is really exciting here is that the brain data from these two complimentary experiments suggest that third-person self-talk may constitute a relatively effortless form of emotion regulation," said Ethan Kross, professor at University of Michigan in the US.
     
     
    The study was published in the journal Scientific Reports.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    28-Year-Old Indian National Pleads Guilty To Call Centres Scam In Us

    28-Year-Old Indian National Pleads Guilty To Call Centres Scam In Us
    Bharat Kumar Patel, 43, previously pleaded guilty for his role in the fraud and money laundering scheme.

    28-Year-Old Indian National Pleads Guilty To Call Centres Scam In Us

    Dutch Court Rules 12-Year-Old Boy Can Refuse Chemotherapy

    Dutch Court Rules 12-Year-Old Boy Can Refuse Chemotherapy
    THE HAGUE, Netherlands — A judge in the Netherlands has ruled that a 12-year-old boy does not have to undergo chemotherapy if he does not want it.

    Dutch Court Rules 12-Year-Old Boy Can Refuse Chemotherapy

    Michelle Obama Criticizes Trump School Lunch Decision

    WASHINGTON — Former first lady Michelle Obama is criticizing a Trump administration decision to delay federal rules aimed at making school lunches healthier.

    Michelle Obama Criticizes Trump School Lunch Decision

    Ten Indian-Origin MPs Set For Tough Fight In UK General Election

    Ten Indian-Origin MPs Set For Tough Fight In UK General Election
    Ten Indian-origin MPs who made it to the House of Commons in the last UK general elections are set for a tough fight in the June 8 polls as Britain's major political parties finalised their list of prospective candidates.

    Ten Indian-Origin MPs Set For Tough Fight In UK General Election

    World Cyberattack Cripples UK Hospitals, Demands Ransoms

    World Cyberattack Cripples UK Hospitals, Demands Ransoms
    LONDON — Britain's health service was hit Friday by a huge international cyberattack that froze computers at hospitals across the country — an attack that shut down wards, closed emergency rooms and brought medical treatments to a screeching halt.

    World Cyberattack Cripples UK Hospitals, Demands Ransoms

    Scorpion On Plane Delays Flight For Hours For Second Time In A Month. Yes, It Is United Again

    Scorpion On Plane Delays Flight For Hours For Second Time In A Month. Yes, It Is United Again
    Flight 1035 was set to fly from Houston in the US to Quito, Ecuador last night. The plane had left the gate at George Bush Intercontinental Airport when the arachnid appeared.

    Scorpion On Plane Delays Flight For Hours For Second Time In A Month. Yes, It Is United Again