1. The Regulation of Negative and Positive Affect in Daily Life
- Author
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Philippe Verduyn, Peter Kuppens, Peter Koval, Yan Lin Lim, and Karen Brans
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Experience sampling method ,regulation strategies ,Emotions ,Repression, Psychology ,Context (language use) ,Affect (psychology) ,INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES ,Sampling Studies ,Developmental psychology ,Thinking ,Interpersonal relationship ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Distraction ,medicine ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,VALIDITY ,Expressive Suppression ,Everyday life ,deliberate emotion regulation ,General Psychology ,Retrospective Studies ,positive and negative affect ,INTENSITY ,SOCIAL-CONSEQUENCES ,daily life ,Awareness ,DEPRESSION ,humanities ,RUMINATIVE SELF-FOCUS ,MODEL ,Affect ,experience sampling ,EMOTION-REGULATION ,Rumination ,EXPERIENCE ,Female ,Self Report ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Abstract
Emotion regulation has primarily been studied either experimentally or by using retrospective trait questionnaires. Very few studies have investigated emotion regulation in the context in which it is usually deployed, namely, the complexity of everyday life. We address this in the current paper by reporting findings of two experience-sampling studies (Ns = 46 and 95) investigating the use of six emotion-regulation strategies (reflection, reappraisal, rumination, distraction, expressive suppression, and social sharing) and their associations with changes in positive affect (PA) and negative affect (NA) in daily life. Regarding the relative use of emotion-regulation strategies, a highly similar ordering was found across both studies with distraction being used more than sharing and reappraisal. While the use of all six strategies was positively correlated both within- and between-persons, different strategies were associated with distinct affective consequences: Suppression and rumination were associated with increases in NA and decreases in PA, whereas reflection was associated with increases in PA across both studies. Additionally, reappraisal, distraction, and social sharing were related to increases in PA in Study 2. Discussion focuses on how the current findings fit with theoretical models of emotion regulation and with previous evidence from experimental and retrospective studies.
- Published
- 2013