Emotion regulation between determinants and consequences

被引:7
作者
Turliuc, Maria Nicoleta [1 ]
Bujor, Liliana [2 ]
机构
[1] Alexandru Ioan Cuza Univ, Fac Psychol & Educ Sci, Iasi, Romania
[2] Alexandru Ioan Cuza Univ, Fac Psychol & Educ Sci, Suceava, Romania
来源
5TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE EDU-WORLD 2012 - EDUCATION FACING CONTEMPORARY WORLD ISSUES | 2013年 / 76卷
关键词
emotion regulation; cognitive reappraisal; expressive suppression; personality; attachment; emotion socialization; emotional; cognitive and social consequences; REGULATION STRATEGY USE; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; EXPRESSIVE SUPPRESSION; ATTACHMENT; PERSONALITY; ADOLESCENTS; CHILDREN;
D O I
10.1016/j.sbspro.2013.04.218
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Emotion regulation, a concept that sparked great interest from researchers in the last two decades, is deepening the understanding of the affective dimension of mental functioning. If there was a time when emotions were taboo for research and psychological intervention, today it has become a significant component that is integral with the cognitions and behaviors and this allows a holistic approach to the human being. Furthermore, research in this area 'dug' so much, that at this point there are known strategies that we use even in the emotion generative process. The recent literature, dedicated to emotional regulation, argues that people try, by an automatic way, to control their emotional experiences (Gross, 2002). Automatism, more or less functional, is the result of the interaction of heredity, environment and education. Cognitive reappraisal and expressive suppression are the previous focused strategies and response-focused strategies of the process model of emotion regulation (Gross, 2002). The progresses made in knowledge of emotion regulation are the results of experimental studies and studies of individual differences in which emotion regulation has been reported to a number of constructs. Results, coherent and consistent for some variables (eg age is associated with decreased expressive suppression, men use more expressive suppression than women) are contradictory to others (eg, neuroticism, as a dimension of personality, is predictor variable and without significant correlations with expressive suppression, over 25 years increased use of cognitive reappraisal or age does not influence the use of cognitive reappraisal). In our analysis, we organize and summarize the results of investigations in terms of two main categories of factors that, according to the analysis grid, are subsumed to the heredity-environment interaction (as factors of personality development): 1. determinants and 2. consequences. For an accurate analysis, each of the two categories is divided into subcategories and analyzed in terms of the established models: 1.1 intrinsic factors: temperament and personality structure (Five Factor Model of Personality, Tupes & Cristal, 1961) and 2.1. extrinsic factors: attachment style (Attachment Theory, Ainsworth, 1969; Bartholomew and Horowitz Model, 1991; Armsden Model, 1986), emotion socialization (Malatesta- Magai Model, 1991), 2.2. demographic factors (gender and age), 2.3. cultural factors (culture of belonging). In terms of consequences, the analysis focuses on three areas: emotional, cognitive and social. The third factor of personality development - the influence of socio-educational, brings to attention the empirical arguments from clinical psychology and psychotherapy, to support the intervention oriented toward restoring the functional mechanisms of cognitive reappraisal of emotion regulation. (C) 2013 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. Selection and/or peer-review under responsibility of the University of Pitesti, Romania
引用
收藏
页码:848 / 852
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   Emotion regulation in relation with resilience in emerging adults: The mediating role of self-esteem [J].
Mouatsou, Chrysi ;
Koutra, Katerina .
CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 42 (01) :734-747
[22]   The role of emotion regulation and maternal symptoms in Turkish mothers' caregiving helplessness during toddlerhood [J].
Toz, Naz ;
Arikan, Gizem ;
Ustundag-Budak, A. Meltem .
CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 42 (08) :6106-6116
[23]   Emotion Regulation INTRODUCTION [J].
McRae, Kateri ;
Gross, James J. .
EMOTION, 2020, 20 (01) :1-9
[24]   Mindsets, emotion regulation and student outcomes: evidence from a sample of higher education students in Singapore [J].
Wong, Alexis Wan Yunn ;
Lee, Ai Noi .
CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY, 2025, 44 (06) :4988-5002
[25]   COMPETITIVE ANXIETY IN ATHLETES: EMOTION REGULATION AND PERSONALITY MATTER [J].
Amaro, Rita ;
Brandao, Tania .
KINESIOLOGY, 2023, 55 (01) :108-119
[26]   Developing an extended process model of emotion regulation in PTSD [J].
O'Brien, Hope ;
Felmingham, Kim ;
Lau, Winnie ;
O'Donnell, Meaghan .
BEHAVIOUR RESEARCH AND THERAPY, 2025, 184
[27]   Associations Between Temperament, Emotion Regulation, and Depression in Youth: The Role of Positive Temperament [J].
Van Beveren, Marie-Lotte ;
McIntosh, Kathryn ;
Vandevivere, Eva ;
Wante, Laura ;
Vandeweghe, Laura ;
Van Durme, Kim ;
Vandewalle, Julie ;
Verbeken, Sandra ;
Braet, Caroline .
JOURNAL OF CHILD AND FAMILY STUDIES, 2016, 25 (06) :1954-1968
[28]   Relationships Between Parent and Child Emotion Regulation Strategy Use: A Brief Report [J].
Bariola, Emily ;
Hughes, Elizabeth K. ;
Gullone, Eleonora .
JOURNAL OF CHILD AND FAMILY STUDIES, 2012, 21 (03) :443-448
[29]   Positive emotion dispositions and emotion regulation in the Italian population [J].
Chirico, Alice ;
Shiota, Michelle N. ;
Gaggioli, Andrea .
PLOS ONE, 2021, 16 (03)
[30]   Emotion regulation among Lebanese adults: Validation of the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire and association with attachment styles [J].
Kahwagi, Reine-Marie ;
Zeidan, Rouba K. ;
Haddad, Chadia ;
Hallit, Rabih ;
Sacre, Hala ;
Kheir, Nelly ;
Salameh, Pascale ;
Obeid, Sahar ;
Hallit, Souheil .
PERSPECTIVES IN PSYCHIATRIC CARE, 2021, 57 (02) :809-820