BackgroundMaladaptive and adaptive emotion regulation are putative risk and protective factors for depression and anxiety, but most prior research does not differentiate within-person effects from between-person individual differences. The current study does so during the early part of the Covid-19 pandemic when internalizing symptoms were high.MethodsA sample of emerging adult undergraduate students (N = 154) completed online questionnaires bi-weekly on depression, anxiety, and emotion regulation across eight weeks during the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic (April 2nd to June 27th, 2020).ResultsDepression demonstrated significantly positive between-person correlations with overall maladaptive emotion regulation, catastrophizing, and self-blame, and negative correlations with overall adaptive emotion regulation and reappraisal. Anxiety demonstrated significantly positive between-person correlations with overall maladaptive emotion regulation, rumination, and catastrophizing, and a negative correlation with reappraisal. After controlling for these between-person associations, however, there were generally no within-person associations between emotion regulation and internalizing symptoms.ConclusionsEmotion regulation and internalizing symptoms might be temporally stable individual differences that cooccur with one another as opposed to having a more dynamic relation. Alternatively, these dynamic mechanisms might operate over much shorter or longer periods compared to the two-week time lag in the current study.
机构:
Western Univ, Dept Psychol, London, ON, Canada
Western Univ, Brain & Mind Inst, Western Interdisciplinary Res Bldg,Room 3190, London, ON N6A 5B7, CanadaWestern Univ, Dept Psychol, London, ON, Canada
Daoust, Andrew R.
Green, Haley
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Western Univ, Dept Psychol, London, ON, CanadaWestern Univ, Dept Psychol, London, ON, Canada
Green, Haley
Vandermeer, Matthew R. J.
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St Josephs Healthcare Hamilton, Anxiety Treatment & Res Ctr, Hamilton, ON, CanadaWestern Univ, Dept Psychol, London, ON, Canada
Vandermeer, Matthew R. J.
Liu, Pan
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North Dakota State Univ, Dept Psychol, Fargo, ND USAWestern Univ, Dept Psychol, London, ON, Canada