“…First, growing evidence suggests that inhibitory processes engaged to suppress retrieval of unwanted memories reduce explicit memory for the suppressed events, contributing to a phenomenon known as suppression-induced forgetting ( Anderson & Green, 2001 ; see Anderson & Hanslmayr, 2014 for a review). Notably, difficulties in forgetting via retrieval suppression have been associated with worse mental health status: impaired suppression-induced forgetting has been found in individuals suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder ( Catarino, Kupper, Werner-Seidler, Dalgleish, & Anderson, 2015 ), high ruminators ( Fawcett et al, 2015 , Hertel et al, 2018 ), people with higher trait anxiety ( Marzi, Regina, & Righi, 2014 ; see also Benoit, Davies, & Anderson, 2016 ), and in participants suffering from depression ( Hertel and Gerstle, 2003 , Noreen and Ridout, 2016a , Noreen and Ridout, 2016b , Zhang et al, 2016 ). In contrast, better suppression-induced forgetting ability predicts reduced intrusiveness of a traumatic film over a one-week period ( Streb, Mecklinger, Anderson, Lass-Hennemann, & Michael, 2016 ) and also predicts reduced negative affect associated with suppressed content ( Gagnepain, Hulbert, & Anderson, 2017 ).…”