2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.cpr.2018.07.002
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Cognition and self-injurious thoughts and behaviors: A systematic review of longitudinal studies

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Cited by 66 publications
(45 citation statements)
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References 135 publications
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“…For instance, increases in metacognition and abstract reasoning may enhance the ability to ruminate (Papageorgiou & Wells, 2003), and increases in future thinking abilities may facilitate hopelessness (Kosnes, Whelan, O'Donavan, & McHugh, 2013). Thus, types of negative cognition commonly associated with suicidal thoughts and behaviors (Cha, Wilson, Tezanos, DiVasto, & Tolchin, 2019) may become more advanced during older adolescence. Moreover, normative developmental changes in adolescent social networks that make peers more influential may also contribute to increased potential for imitation of risky behaviors, including modeling of suicidal behavior (Pickering et al, 2018).…”
Section: (B) Malesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, increases in metacognition and abstract reasoning may enhance the ability to ruminate (Papageorgiou & Wells, 2003), and increases in future thinking abilities may facilitate hopelessness (Kosnes, Whelan, O'Donavan, & McHugh, 2013). Thus, types of negative cognition commonly associated with suicidal thoughts and behaviors (Cha, Wilson, Tezanos, DiVasto, & Tolchin, 2019) may become more advanced during older adolescence. Moreover, normative developmental changes in adolescent social networks that make peers more influential may also contribute to increased potential for imitation of risky behaviors, including modeling of suicidal behavior (Pickering et al, 2018).…”
Section: (B) Malesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This future research wish list is clearly ambitious and will take time to fulfill, but the knowledge that may be gained is considerable. We already have hints that implicit associations in the clinical field can predict treatment outcomes (Teachman et al 2008), likelihood of relapse (see van Tuijl et al 2018a), and even risk of suicide (see Nock et al 2010 and a recent review by Cha et al 2018), among other important clinical outcomes. These hints suggest that investing in this research has strong potential to directly improve the lives of the millions of people suffering from mental illness.…”
Section: Conclusion and Call For Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our allusion to the interplay between traits and naturalistic state factors is relevant to DLPFC's role in emotional regulation and suicide. Poor regulation is a transdiagnostic risk factor for self-injurious behaviors (76). Emotional regulation is the control-dependent modification of reactions to emotionally evocative events (77); this regulation evokes DLPFC activation (reviewed in (78)).…”
Section: Cognitive Control: Transitions From Ideation-to-attemptmentioning
confidence: 99%