How Positive Thinking Can Make You a Better Problem Solver
The science behind how negative feelings can actually prevent you from thinking clearly and making creative decisions. We speak with Prof. Barbara Fredrickson, who studies how to reframe adversity and be more effective.
by Joe Robinson
Jan 01, 2013
3 minutes
Bouncing back: Punching bags are good at it; humans, less so. A growing body of evidence, though, suggests you can ward off tailspins by building up your reserves of the best antidote to adversity: positive emotions, the hidden engine of resilience.
"We call it the 'undo effect,'" says Barbara Fredrickson, author of and a professor of psychology at the , whose research has upended our understanding of a group of emotions that were once
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