'Stop seeing everything so negatively." they say. But the cognitive behaviors underlying depression don't allow it. Let's talk about mental reactions and sticky patterns that outweigh false brightsides.
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summary
This conversation delves into the cognitive basis of depression, focusing on how neural networks, memory games, language, cognitive inhibition inhibition, outdated working memory, and rumination contribute to depressive states. It explores the mechanisms behind cognitive depression, compassionate views for the state of human suffering, and offers strategies for managing depression through attention training and environmental changes.
takeaways
- Neural networks, schemas, and representations automatically shape our understanding of experiences.
- Even singular stimulation events can activate depressive schemas, limiting potential perceptions.
- Memory biases in depression lead to a resonating focus on negative experiences.
- Over generalized and explicit memories are unique experiences associated with depression.
- Cognitive inhibition is ironically inhibited during depression.
- Working memory cannot update with relevant material under depressive spells.
- Emotional regulation is hindered by cognitive control loss in depression.
- Rumination causes or exacerbates depression, anxiety, and PTSD due to a negative focus on the self.
- Automatic reckoning with the human condition may be the cause of many varieties of cognitive disorders.
- Training attention can redirect focus away from negativity.
- Ambiguous or negative social environments spark rumination which leads to depression.
- Changing environments and behaviors can help disrupt negative neural networks.
- Understanding the cognitive processes behind depression can bolster compassion and help deactivate negative schemas.
keywords
cognitive depression, memory bias, cognitive inhibition, working memory, overgeneralized memory, semantic memory, rumination, emotional regulation, reappraisal, self-doubt, neural networks
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