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  <title><![CDATA[PhD Proposal by Alexandra Trani]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p><strong>Name:</strong>&nbsp;<strong>Alexandra Trani</strong></p>

<p><strong>Dissertation&nbsp;Proposal Meeting</strong><br />
<strong>Date:</strong>&nbsp;December 10, 2019<br />
<strong>Time:</strong>&nbsp;3:00 pm<br />
<strong>Location:&nbsp;</strong>J.S. Coon Building, Room 217<br />
&nbsp;<br />
<strong>Advisor:</strong><br />
Paul Verhaeghen, Ph.D. (Georgia Tech)<br />
&nbsp;<br />
<strong>Thesis Committee Members:</strong></p>

<p>Paul Verhaeghen, Ph.D.&nbsp;(Georgia Tech)<br />
Eric Schumacher, Ph.D. (Georgia Tech)</p>

<p>Keaton Fletcher, Ph.D. (Georgia Tech)</p>

<p>Christ Stanzione, Ph.D. (Georgia Tech)</p>

<p>Erica Briscoe, Ph.D. (Georgia Tech Research Institute)</p>

<p>&nbsp;<br />
<strong>Title: Creativity, Depression, and Rumination</strong></p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>

<p>Among&nbsp; creative professionals,&nbsp; affective vulnerability&nbsp; and diagnosed&nbsp; mood disorders<br />
are higher than would be expected in the general population (Ludwig, 1995). The relation-<br />
ship between creativity and depression may be mediated by rumination (Trani, submitted;<br />
Verhaeghen,&nbsp; Joormann,&nbsp; &amp;&nbsp; Aikman,&nbsp; 2014;&nbsp; Verhaeghen,&nbsp; Joormann,&nbsp; &amp;&nbsp; Khan,&nbsp; 2005;&nbsp; Ver-<br />
haeghen, Trani, &amp; Aikman, 2017)&ndash; that is, a broad class of thoughts that recur regardless<br />
of context or task and are centered around a common theme or idea (Leonard L. Martin &amp;<br />
Tesser, 1996). Recently I proposed a model in which adaptive and maladaptive ruminations<br />
differentially influence creativity and mood (Trani,&nbsp; submitted).&nbsp;&nbsp; Essentially,&nbsp; rumination,<br />
maladaptive or otherwise, enhances associative processing by sustaining the activation of<br />
concepts within memory. Adaptive rumination supports creative associative processing by<br />
allowing concepts in memory to remain active despite being unrelated to present tasks or<br />
environments. In much the same way, maladaptive rumination works to sustain depressive<br />
symptoms across environments by sustaining activation of negative affect and related con-<br />
cepts in memory which would impair a person&rsquo;s ability to distract themselves from negative<br />
moods. The present proposal seeks to test the hypothesized relationships between creativ-<br />
ity, rumination, and depression using structural equation modeling.&nbsp; Roughly 350 students<br />
enrolled at the Georgia Institute of Technology will complete an online battery of creativity,<br />
rumination, personality, and affective vulnerability measures.&nbsp; Additionally, I will explore<br />
differences in these relationships with state and trait rumination.</p>
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