Verhaeghen Paul, Joorman Jutta, Khan Rodney
Department of Psychology, Center for Health and Behavior, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244, USA.
Emotion. 2005 Jun;5(2):226-32. doi: 10.1037/1528-3542.5.2.226.
Past research has shown that creative behavior is associated with a higher risk for depression. The authors hypothesized that a 3rd underlying factor, namely, self-reflective rumination, may explain the connection. This hypothesis was examined in a sample of 99 undergraduate college students, using path analysis. The authors found that self-reported past depressive symptomatology was linked to increased self-reflective rumination. Rumination, in turn, was related to current symptomatology and to self-rated creative interests and objectively measured creative fluency, originality, and elaboration. No direct link existed between currently depressed mood and either creative interest or creative behavior. These results suggest that the association between depression and creativity is solely the result of rumination.
过去的研究表明,创造性行为与患抑郁症的风险较高有关。作者推测,第三个潜在因素,即自我反思性沉思,可能解释了这种联系。在99名本科大学生样本中,使用路径分析对这一假设进行了检验。作者发现,自我报告的过去抑郁症状与自我反思性沉思增加有关。反过来,沉思又与当前症状以及自我评定的创造性兴趣和客观测量的创造性流畅性、原创性和详尽性有关。当前抑郁情绪与创造性兴趣或创造性行为之间不存在直接联系。这些结果表明,抑郁与创造力之间的关联完全是沉思的结果。