Frontiers in Psychology (Sep 2017)

Mental Contrasting of a Negative Future with a Positive Reality Regulates State Anxiety

  • Gunnar Brodersen,
  • Gabriele Oettingen,
  • Gabriele Oettingen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01596
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

Read online

Mental contrasting of a desired future with impeding reality is a self-regulatory strategy fostering goal pursuit. However, there is little research on mental contrasting of a negative future with a positive reality. We conducted two experiments, each with four experimental conditions, investigating the effects of mental contrasting a negative future with a positive reality on state anxiety: participants who mentally contrasted a negative future regarding a bacterial epidemic (Study 1, N = 199) or an idiosyncratic negative event (Study 2, N = 206) showed less state anxiety than participants who imagined the negative future only or who reverse contrasted; participants who mentally elaborated on the positive reality also showed less state anxiety. Our findings suggest that mental contrasting of a negative future helps people reduce disproportional anxiety regarding a negative future.

Keywords