Identifying the transdiagnostic and unique domains of emotion regulation difficulties in subclinical conditions of anxiety and co-occurring anxiety-depression

被引:0
作者
Meenakshi Shukla
Rakesh Pandey
机构
[1] Banaras Hindu University,Department of Psychology
来源
Current Psychology | 2021年 / 40卷
关键词
Emotional regulation; Anxiety; Depression; Transdiagnostic; Positive affect; Negative affect;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
It is well documented that emotion regulation difficulties are linked with various forms of psychopathology including anxiety and depression but the literature is still inconclusive regarding whether emotion regulation difficulties are transdiagnostic or pathology-specific. We speculate that certain types of emotion regulation difficulties may be transdiagnostic while others may show specificity. The present study attempts to empirically validate this speculation and tries to explore the common (transdiagnostic) and unique domains of emotion regulation difficulties associated with psychometrically identified subclinical groups of anxious and anxious-depressed individuals. University and college students (N = 192) were assessed on self-report measures of emotion regulation difficulties, positive-negative affect, depression, and trait and free-floating anxiety and classified into anxious, anxious-depressed, and normal groups based on the results of cluster analysis. Both subclinical groups reported overall higher levels of emotion regulation difficulties than normals, with anxious-depressed group showing more difficulties than anxious group. While difficulty engaging in goal-directed behaviour, lack of emotional awareness and emotional clarity were common across anxious and anxious-depressed groups, the anxious-depressed group showed a unique profile of emotion regulation difficulties characterized by non-acceptance of emotional response, impulse control difficulties, and limited access to emotion regulation strategies. Findings of discriminant function analysis revealed that while anxious-depressed group was characterised by difficulties in regulating emotions, the anxious group presented difficulties in emotional insight. The findings highlight the possible role of both unique and transdiagnostic components of emotion regulation difficulties in the development/maintenance of psychopathologies and have significant implications for predicting future development and psychotherapeutic management of these disorders.
引用
收藏
页码:2896 / 2909
页数:13
相关论文
共 141 条
[1]  
Aldao A(2012)Emotion regulation strategies as transdiagnostic processes: A closer look at the invariance of their form and function Revista de Psicopatologia y Psicologia Clinica 17 261-278
[2]  
Aldao A(2014)Broadening the scope of research on emotion regulation strategies and psychopathology Cognitive Behaviour Therapy 43 22-33
[3]  
Dixon-Gordon KL(2010)Emotion-regulation strategies across psychopathology: A meta-analytic review Clinical Psychological Review 30 217-237
[4]  
Aldao A(2013)Evidence-based psychological treatments: An update and a way forward Annual Review of Clinical Psychology 9 1-27
[5]  
Nolen-Hoeksema S(2013)Emotion regulation in bipolar disorder: Are emotion regulation abilities less compromised in euthymic bipolar disorder than unipolar depressive or anxiety disorders? Open Journal of Psychiatry 3 1-7
[6]  
Schweizer S(1961)An inventory for measuring depression Archives of General Psychiatry 4 561-571
[7]  
Barlow DH(1988)Psychometric properties of the Beck depression inventory: Twenty-five years of evaluation Clinical Psychology Review 8 77-100
[8]  
Bullis JR(2012)Emotion regulation and mental health: Recent findings, current challenges, and future directions Current Opinion in Psychiatry 25 128-134
[9]  
Comer JS(2016)Development and validation of a brief version of the difficulties in emotion regulation scale: The DERS-16 Journal of Psychopathology and Behavioral Assessment 38 284-296
[10]  
Ametaj AA(1998)Structural relationships among dimensions of the DSM-IV anxiety and mood disorders and dimensions of negative affect, positive affect, and autonomic arousal Journal of Abnormal Psychology 107 179-192