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Depressive Rumination – Nature, Theory and Treatment
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Table of Contents

About the Editors. List of Contributors. Preface. Acknowledgements. PART I: NATURE AND CONSEQUENCES OF RUMINATION. 1. Nature, Functions, and Beliefs about Depressive Rumination (Costas Papageorgiou and Adrian Wells). 2. The Consequences of Dysphoric Rumination (Sonja Lyubomirsky and Chris Tkach). 3. Reactive Rumination: Outcomes, Mechanisms, and Developmental Antecedents (Jelena Spasojevic, Lauren B. Alloy, Lyn Y. Abramson, Donal MacCoon, and Matthew S. Robinson). 4. Mental Control and Depressive Rumination (Richard M. Wenzlaff). 5. Physiological Aspects of Depressive Rumination (Greg J. Siegle and Julian F. Thayer). PART II: THEORIES OF RUMINATION. 6. The Response Styles Theory (Susan Nolen-Hoeksema). 7. Rumination, Depression, and Metacognition: The S-REF Model (Gerald Matthews and Adrian Wells). 8. Rumination as a Function of Goal Progress, Stop-Rules, and Cerebral Lateralization (Leonard L. Martin, Ilan Shrira and Helen M. Startup). 9. A Comparison and Appraisal of Theories of Rumination (Melissa A. Brotman and Robert J. DeRubeis). PART III: MEASUREMENT AND TREATMENT OF RUMINATION. 10. Measurement of Depressive Rumination and Associated Constructs (Olivier Luminet). 11. Psychological Treatment of Rumination (Christine Purdon). 12. Cognitive Therapy for Depressive Thinking (Dean McMillan and Peter Fisher). 13. Metacognitive Therapy for Depressive Rumination (Adrian Wells and Costas Papageorgiou). Index.

About the Author

Costas Papageorgiou is Senior Lecturer at Lancaster University and was Deputy Director of the Specialist Service for Affective (Mood) Disorders in Manchester. He obtained a BSc from the University of Buckingham and an MA and a Doctorate in Clinical Psychology from the University of Liverpool. Dr. Papageorgiou has expertise in the assessment and treatment of depression. He has been extensively involved in investigating rumination and depression and has co-authored the first empirical studies examining the link between rumination, depression, and metacognition. Adrian Wells is Reader in Clinical Psychology at the University of Manchester and Professor at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim. He is recognized for his contribution to the development of cognitive theory and therapy of emotional disorders. He has published widely in peer-review journals and has authored/co-authored several ground-breaking books in the field.

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