Journal article

Emotional inertia and external events: The roles of exposure, reactivity, and recovery

P Koval, A Brose, ML Pe, M Houben, Y Erbas, D Champagne, P Kuppens

Emotion | AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC | Published : 2015

Abstract

Increased moment-to-moment predictability, or inertia, of negative affect has been identified as an important dynamic marker of psychological maladjustment, and increased vulnerability to depression in particular. However, little is known about the processes underlying emotional inertia. The current article examines how the emotional context, and people's responses to it, are related to emotional inertia. We investigated how individual differences in the inertia of negative affect (NA) are related to individual differences in exposure, reactivity, and recovery from emotional events, in daily life (assessed using experience sampling) as well as in the lab (assessed using an emotional film-cli..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by KU Leuven Research Council


Awarded by Interuniversity Attraction Poles Programme - Belgian government


Funding Acknowledgements

This research was partly supported by KU Leuven Research Council Grants (GOA/15/003 & OT/11/031), by the Interuniversity Attraction Poles Programme financed by the Belgian government (IAP/P7/06), and by an FWO grant awarded to Peter Kuppens. We thank Philippe Verduyn for his helpful comments on an earlier version of the article.