Beyond words: sensory properties of depressive thoughts
Beyond words: sensory properties of depressive thoughts
Verbal thoughts (such as negative cognitions) and sensory phenomena (such as visual mental imagery) are usually conceptualised as distinct mental experiences. The present study examined to what extent depressive thoughts are accompanied by sensory experiences and how this is associated with symptom severity, insight of illness and quality of life. A large sample of mildly to moderately depressed patients (N = 356) was recruited from multiple sources and asked about sensory properties of their depressive thoughts in an online study. Diagnostic status and symptom severity were established over a telephone interview with trained raters. Sensory properties of negative thoughts were reported by 56.5% of the sample (i.e., sensation in at least one sensory modality). The highest prevalence was seen for bodily (39.6%) followed by auditory (30.6%) and visual (27.2%) sensations. Patients reporting sensory properties of thoughts showed more severe psychopathological symptoms than those who did not. The degree of perceptuality was marginally associated with quality of life. The findings support the notion that depressive thoughts are not only verbal but commonly accompanied by sensory experiences. The perceptuality of depressive thoughts and the resulting sense of authenticity may contribute to the emotional impact and pervasiveness of such thoughts, making them difficult to dismiss for their holder.
1047-1056
Moritz, S.
d32e4e0c-48bb-4566-8cfd-695f271e402f
Hörmann, C.C.
31b6058c-ecfb-46ff-9302-c15f4455e41b
Schröder, J.
bb1bee59-7961-4a12-977a-4f719e24506b
Berger, T.
8e281c56-d050-400b-8e9a-bb1d56077e21
Jacob, G.A.
79ef5dfd-bfaf-4579-8847-c0fe84ecd164
Meyer, B.
0ba35a30-8bbf-4821-8fff-0433475d0390
Holmes, E.A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Späth, C.
5c642536-e06d-4a71-9a8c-423112e7fb1c
Hautzinger, M.
6c61d01e-83a4-4954-9d58-38dc3b1b8803
Lutz, W.
da0e4bfd-3b63-4ee2-896a-294a82e56859
Rose, M.
07676ddd-b5ab-4ab6-bcb5-0b26330b3602
Klein, J.P.
3c87b2db-2f33-4415-90e6-fa8569b9962b
20 December 2013
Moritz, S.
d32e4e0c-48bb-4566-8cfd-695f271e402f
Hörmann, C.C.
31b6058c-ecfb-46ff-9302-c15f4455e41b
Schröder, J.
bb1bee59-7961-4a12-977a-4f719e24506b
Berger, T.
8e281c56-d050-400b-8e9a-bb1d56077e21
Jacob, G.A.
79ef5dfd-bfaf-4579-8847-c0fe84ecd164
Meyer, B.
0ba35a30-8bbf-4821-8fff-0433475d0390
Holmes, E.A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Späth, C.
5c642536-e06d-4a71-9a8c-423112e7fb1c
Hautzinger, M.
6c61d01e-83a4-4954-9d58-38dc3b1b8803
Lutz, W.
da0e4bfd-3b63-4ee2-896a-294a82e56859
Rose, M.
07676ddd-b5ab-4ab6-bcb5-0b26330b3602
Klein, J.P.
3c87b2db-2f33-4415-90e6-fa8569b9962b
Moritz, S., Hörmann, C.C., Schröder, J., Berger, T., Jacob, G.A., Meyer, B., Holmes, E.A., Späth, C., Hautzinger, M., Lutz, W., Rose, M. and Klein, J.P.
(2013)
Beyond words: sensory properties of depressive thoughts.
Cognition and Emotion, 28 (6), .
(doi:10.1080/02699931.2013.868342).
Abstract
Verbal thoughts (such as negative cognitions) and sensory phenomena (such as visual mental imagery) are usually conceptualised as distinct mental experiences. The present study examined to what extent depressive thoughts are accompanied by sensory experiences and how this is associated with symptom severity, insight of illness and quality of life. A large sample of mildly to moderately depressed patients (N = 356) was recruited from multiple sources and asked about sensory properties of their depressive thoughts in an online study. Diagnostic status and symptom severity were established over a telephone interview with trained raters. Sensory properties of negative thoughts were reported by 56.5% of the sample (i.e., sensation in at least one sensory modality). The highest prevalence was seen for bodily (39.6%) followed by auditory (30.6%) and visual (27.2%) sensations. Patients reporting sensory properties of thoughts showed more severe psychopathological symptoms than those who did not. The degree of perceptuality was marginally associated with quality of life. The findings support the notion that depressive thoughts are not only verbal but commonly accompanied by sensory experiences. The perceptuality of depressive thoughts and the resulting sense of authenticity may contribute to the emotional impact and pervasiveness of such thoughts, making them difficult to dismiss for their holder.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: 20 December 2013
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 508129
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508129
ISSN: 0269-9931
PURE UUID: 827c65e6-fa59-4c60-981e-826fc619aed0
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 13 Jan 2026 18:01
Last modified: 15 Jan 2026 03:16
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
S. Moritz
Author:
C.C. Hörmann
Author:
J. Schröder
Author:
T. Berger
Author:
G.A. Jacob
Author:
B. Meyer
Author:
E.A. Holmes
Author:
C. Späth
Author:
M. Hautzinger
Author:
W. Lutz
Author:
M. Rose
Author:
J.P. Klein
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics