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Journal ArticleDOI

Distinguishing how from why the mind wanders: A process–occurrence framework for self-generated mental activity.

Jonathan Smallwood
- 01 May 2013 - 
- Vol. 139, Iss: 3, pp 519-535
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TLDR
It is suggested that identifying the moment that self-generated mental events begin is a necessary next step in moving toward a testable account of why the mind has evolved to neglect the present in favor of ruminations on the past or imaginary musings of what may yet come to pass.
Abstract
Cognition can unfold with little regard to the events taking place in the environment, and such self-generated mental activity poses a specific set of challenges for its scientific analysis in both cognitive science and neuroscience. One problem is that the spontaneous onset of self-generated mental activity makes it hard to distinguish the events that control the occurrence of the experience from those processes that ensure the continuity of an internal train of thought once initiated. This review demonstrates that a distinction between process and occurrence (a) provides theoretical clarity that has been absent from current discussions of self-generated mental activity, (b) affords conceptual leverage on seemingly disparate results associating the state with both domain-general processes and task error, and (c) draws attention to important questions for understanding unconstrained thought in contexts such as psychopathology and education. It is suggested that identifying the moment that self-generated mental events begin is a necessary next step in moving toward a testable account of why the mind has evolved to neglect the present in favor of ruminations on the past or imaginary musings of what may yet come to pass.

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Citations
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Neural correlates of personal goal processing during episodic future thinking and mind-wandering: An ALE meta-analysis

TL;DR: Two separate ALE meta‐analyses of neuroimaging studies of episodic future thinking (EFT), mind‐wandering, and personal goal processing showed that the three domains activated a common set of brain regions within the default network and, most notably, the medial cortex, which suggests that the medial prefrontal cortex mediates the processing of personal goals during both EFT and mind-wandering.
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Goal-Congruent Default Network Activity Facilitates Cognitive Control

TL;DR: The results suggest that activation of the default network can contribute to task performance during an externally directed executive control task and provide evidence that successful activation ofThe default network in a contextually relevant manner facilitates goal-directed cognition.
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Goal Commitments and the content of thoughts and dreams: basic principles

TL;DR: In this paper, a few empirically supported principles can account for much of the thematic content of waking thought, including rumination, and dreams, including mind-wandering and dreaming.
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Similarities and differences between mind-wandering and external distraction: A latent variable analysis of lapses of attention and their relation to cognitive abilities

TL;DR: The results suggest that the common variance shared by mind-wandering, external distraction, and attention control is what primarily accounts for their relation with working memory capacity and fluid intelligence.
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Phenomenology of future-oriented mind-wandering episodes.

TL;DR: Future-oriented mind-wandering episodes involved inner speech to a greater extent, were more personally relevant, more realistic/concrete, and more often part of structured sequences of thoughts, and provide new insights into how this particular form of mind-Wandering may adaptively contribute to autobiographical planning.
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