AI Article Synopsis

  • Health and well-being are influenced by our thoughts and actions, with specific environments and social contexts affecting how we think.
  • The study involved participants completing surveys over five days, using analysis to uncover common thought patterns related to their activities.
  • It found that social interactions significantly shape our thought processes, suggesting that understanding these "thought-activity" connections can be beneficial for researchers and healthcare professionals.

Article Abstract

Health and well-being are impacted by our thoughts and the things we do. In the laboratory, studies suggest specific task contexts impact thought processes. More broadly, this suggests the people we are with, the places we are in, and the activities we perform may influence our thought patterns. In our study, participants completed experience sampling surveys for five days in daily life. Principal component analysis decomposed this data to identify common "patterns of thought," and linear mixed modelling related these patterns to the participants' activities. Our study replicated the influence of socializing on patterns of thought and established that this is part of a broader set of relationships linking activities to how thoughts are organized in daily life. Our study suggests sampling thinking in the real world may help map thoughts to activities, and these "thought-activity" mappings could be useful to researchers and health care professionals interested in health and well-being.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.concog.2023.103530DOI Listing

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