PsychologyJournal of Experimental Psychopathology
Trait Repetitive Negative Thinking: A Brief Transdiagnostic Assessment
P. M. Mcevoy, M. A. Thibodeau, et al.
A brief 10-item trait version of the Repetitive Thinking Questionnaire (RTQ-10) was evaluated and found to have a unitary structure, high reliability, distinguish clinical from non-clinical cases, and relate to worry, rumination, and negative affect across its full continuum. Research conducted by Peter M. McEvoy, Michel A. Thibodeau, and Gordon J. G. Asmundson.
Related Publications
Explore these studies to deepen your understanding
Adjacent work that informs or extends this paper's methodology and findings.
Psychology
From tripping and falling to ruminating and worrying: a meta-control account of repetitive negative thinking
P. F. Hitchcock and M. J. Frank
Medicine and Health
Impact of repetitive negative thinking on subjective cognitive decline: insights into cognition and brain structure
L. Mulet-pons, C. Solé-padullés, et al.
Education
Crafting a framework: a Delphi method approach to formulating a maker literacy assessment model for primary school students in China
B. Min, F. Alam, et al.
Medicine and Health
A Brief Resilience-Enhancing Intervention and Loneliness in At-Risk Young Adults: A Secondary Analysis of a Randomized Clinical Trial
N. R. Detore, A. Burke, et al.

