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Claim Text
Results show that fiction can have a positive impact on measures of mood and emotion, but that a process of mnemonic or cognitive consolidation is required first: exposure to fiction does not, on its own, have an immediate impact on well-being.
Simplified Text
Fiction can have positive impact on mood and emotion but mnemonic or cognitive consolidation is required exposure to fiction alone does not have immediate impact on well-being
Confidence Score
0.500
Claim Maker
James Carney, Cole Robertson
Context Type
Website Article
Context Details
{
    "date": null
}
Subject Tags
UUID
9fc8a295-8c2d-4f17-b782-e915a3fc207c
Vector Index
✗ No vector
Created
September 2, 2025 at 7:18 PM (1 week ago)
Last Updated
September 2, 2025 at 7:18 PM (1 week ago)

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Screenshot of https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?campaign_id=18&emc=edit_hh_20250829&id=10.1371/journal.pone.0266323&instance_id=161530&nl=well&regi_id=122976029&segment_id=204892&user_id=b25c5730c89e0c73f75709d8f1254337
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?campaign_id=18&emc=edit_hh_20250829&id=10.1371/journal.pone.0266323&instance_id=161530&nl=well&regi_id=122976029&segment_id=204892&user_id=b25c5730c89e0c73f75709d8f1254337

Five studies explore fiction's effect on mental well-being, examining recall, prescription, discussion, and quality. Results suggest positive impacts but require cognitive consolidation.

Mental Health
Literature
Fiction
Reading
Well-being
Research Study
Cognitive Psychology
Bibliotherapy

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