Emotion regulation in response to daily negative and positive events in youth: The role of event intensity and psychopathology

Publication date

2021-09

Authors

Hiekkaranta, Anu P
Kirtley, Olivia J
Lafit, Ginette
Decoster, Jeroen
Derom, Catherine
de Hert, Marc
Gülöksüz, Sinan
Jacobs, Nele
Menne-Lothmann, Claudia
Rutten, Bart P F

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Environmental and individual contextual factors profoundly influence how people regulate their emotions. The current article addresses the role of event intensity and psychopathology (an admixture of depression, anxiety, and psychoticism) on emotion regulation in response to naturally occurring events. For six days each evening, a youth sample (aged 15-25, N = 713) recorded the intensity of the most positive and most negative event of the day and their subsequent emotion regulation. The intensity of negative events was positively associated with summed total emotion regulation effort, strategy diversity, engaging in rumination, situation modification, emotion expression, and sharing and negatively associated with reappraisal and acceptance. The intensity of positive events was positively associated with strategy diversity, savoring, emotion expression, and sharing. Higher psychopathology symptoms were only related to ruminating more about negative events. We interpret these findings as support for the role of context in the degree of effort and type of emotion regulation that young people engage in.

Keywords

Adolescence, Emotion regulation, Experience sampling method, Positive emotion regulation, Psychopathology, Taverne, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Psychiatry and Mental health, Clinical Psychology, Journal Article

Citation

Hiekkaranta, A P, Kirtley, O J, Lafit, G, Decoster, J, Derom, C, de Hert, M, Gülöksüz, S, Jacobs, N, Menne-Lothmann, C, Rutten, B P F, Thiery, E, van Os, J, van Winkel, R, Wichers, M & Myin-Germeys, I 2021, 'Emotion regulation in response to daily negative and positive events in youth : The role of event intensity and psychopathology', Behaviour Research and Therapy, vol. 144, 103916, pp. 1-14. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brat.2021.103916