Mental imagery as an emotional amplifier: Application to bipolar disorder
Mental imagery as an emotional amplifier: Application to bipolar disorder
Cognitions in the form of mental images have a more powerful impact on emotion than their verbal counterparts. This review synthesizes the cognitive science of imagery and emotion with transdiagnostic clinical research, yielding novel predictions for the basis of emotional volatility in bipolar disorder. Anxiety is extremely common in patients with bipolar disorder and is associated with increased dysfunction and suicidality, yet it is poorly understood and rarely treated. Mental imagery is a neglected aspect of bipolar anxiety although in anxiety disorders such as posttraumatic stress disorder and social phobia focusing on imagery has been crucial for the development of cognitive behavior therapy (CBT).
In this review we present a cognitive model of imagery and emotion applied to bipolar disorder. Within this model mental imagery amplifies emotion, drawing on Clark's cyclical panic model [(1986). A cognitive approach to panic. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 24, 461–470]. We (1) emphasise imagery's amplification of anxiety (cycle one); (2) suggest that imagery amplifies the defining (hypo-) mania of bipolar disorder (cycle two), whereby the overly positive misinterpretation of triggers leads to mood elevation (escalated by imagery), increasing associated beliefs, goals, and action likelihood (all strengthened by imagery).
Imagery suggests a unifying explanation for key unexplained features of bipolar disorder: ubiquitous anxiety, mood instability and creativity. Introducing imagery has novel implications for bipolar treatment innovation - an area where CBT improvements are much-needed.
1251-1258
Holmes, E.A.
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Geddes, J.R.
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Colom, F.
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Goodwin, G.M.
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Holmes, E.A.
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Geddes, J.R.
6a9c9f89-b579-4ad6-8f9f-47f8044ea537
Colom, F.
bdfbdc92-e6c4-401d-bfc3-aabea30325a0
Goodwin, G.M.
0e844526-fe6f-4cf0-bb71-7ba472d10cf0
Holmes, E.A., Geddes, J.R., Colom, F. and Goodwin, G.M.
(2008)
Mental imagery as an emotional amplifier: Application to bipolar disorder.
Behaviour Research and Therapy, 46 (12), .
(doi:10.1016/j.brat.2008.09.005).
Abstract
Cognitions in the form of mental images have a more powerful impact on emotion than their verbal counterparts. This review synthesizes the cognitive science of imagery and emotion with transdiagnostic clinical research, yielding novel predictions for the basis of emotional volatility in bipolar disorder. Anxiety is extremely common in patients with bipolar disorder and is associated with increased dysfunction and suicidality, yet it is poorly understood and rarely treated. Mental imagery is a neglected aspect of bipolar anxiety although in anxiety disorders such as posttraumatic stress disorder and social phobia focusing on imagery has been crucial for the development of cognitive behavior therapy (CBT).
In this review we present a cognitive model of imagery and emotion applied to bipolar disorder. Within this model mental imagery amplifies emotion, drawing on Clark's cyclical panic model [(1986). A cognitive approach to panic. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 24, 461–470]. We (1) emphasise imagery's amplification of anxiety (cycle one); (2) suggest that imagery amplifies the defining (hypo-) mania of bipolar disorder (cycle two), whereby the overly positive misinterpretation of triggers leads to mood elevation (escalated by imagery), increasing associated beliefs, goals, and action likelihood (all strengthened by imagery).
Imagery suggests a unifying explanation for key unexplained features of bipolar disorder: ubiquitous anxiety, mood instability and creativity. Introducing imagery has novel implications for bipolar treatment innovation - an area where CBT improvements are much-needed.
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 September 2008
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 October 2008
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Local EPrints ID: 507803
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507803
ISSN: 0005-7967
PURE UUID: 7e3b0166-0828-43be-82b6-0a0a3fd21855
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Date deposited: 06 Jan 2026 17:53
Last modified: 10 Jan 2026 05:07
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Author:
E.A. Holmes
Author:
J.R. Geddes
Author:
F. Colom
Author:
G.M. Goodwin
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