Recollection & Traumatic Growth: Unique Mediational Pathways Through Traumatic Stress Components

dc.contributor.author Öner, Sezin
dc.contributor.author Özlü, Serap
dc.contributor.author Kurtulmuş, Emine Şeyma
dc.contributor.author Aydemir, Sude
dc.date.accessioned 2022-11-09T09:58:11Z
dc.date.available 2022-11-09T09:58:11Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.description.abstract Although the severity of the COVID-19 outbreak varies from time to time, the pandemic has affected larger audiences worldwide. Given the increasingly severe measures taken by the authorities, healthcare professionals have experienced positive and negative effects of the events, both personally and vicariously. The main aim is to examine how remembering influences vicarious traumatization and post-traumatic growth in a sample of healthcare workers. We proposed a multiple mediation model testing of distinct roles of stress components (hypervigilance, avoidance, intrusion) on the link between recollective features of remembering and post-traumatic growth, which allows characterizing memory-linked mechanisms underlying the effects of traumatic stress on growth. We demonstrated unique pathways by which remembering influenced traumatic growth. For the links of emotional intensity and imagery with growth, we found full mediation through avoidance and intrusion Individuals recalling events with high emotional intensity and imagery tend to experience more intrusions of trauma, which then resulted in traumatic growth. On the other hand, the opposite pattern was found for avoidance. Emotionally intense and vivid recall of events increased avoidance responses, but high avoidance reduced traumatic growth. With respect to reliving, while the pattern was similar, we found a partial mediation, showing the significant role reliving has in supporting traumatic growth.
dc.description.sponsorship DuolingoEuropean Office of Aerospace Research and DevelopmentFindingFiveMIT-IBM Watson AI LabThe Robert J. Glushko and Pamela Samuelson FoundationToyota Research Institute
dc.identifier.citation Kurtulmuş, E. Ş., Özlü, S., Aydemir, S., Öner, S. (26-29 July 2021). Recollection & traumatic growth: unique mediational pathways through traumatic stress components. 43rd Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society: Comparative Cognition: Animal Minds, CogSci. pp. 2391-2395.
dc.identifier.scopus 2-s2.0-85139390184
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11779/1886
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher The Cognitive Science Society
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.subject Memory
dc.subject Traumatic growth
dc.subject Vicarious trauma
dc.subject Recollection
dc.subject Vicarious memory
dc.title Recollection & Traumatic Growth: Unique Mediational Pathways Through Traumatic Stress Components
dc.type Conference Object
dspace.entity.type Publication
gdc.author.id Sude Aydemir / 0000-0002-8233-8907
gdc.author.institutional Aydemir, Sude
gdc.coar.access open access
gdc.coar.type text::conference output
gdc.description.department İİSBF, Psikoloji Bölümü
gdc.description.endpage 2395
gdc.description.publicationcategory Konferans Öğesi - Uluslararası - İdari Personel ve Öğrenci
gdc.description.scopusquality N/A
gdc.description.startpage 2391
gdc.description.wosquality N/A
gdc.publishedmonth Temmuz
gdc.relation.journal 43rd Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society: Comparative Cognition: Animal Minds, CogSci 2021
gdc.scopus.citedcount 0
gdc.wos.publishedmonth Temmuz
gdc.wos.yokperiod YÖK - 2020-21
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication a6e60d5c-b0c7-474a-b49b-284dc710c078
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication.latestForDiscovery a6e60d5c-b0c7-474a-b49b-284dc710c078

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