Journal article

Differentiate to Regulate: Low Negative Emotion Differentiation Is Associated With Ineffective Use but Not Selection of Emotion-Regulation Strategies

EK Kalokerinos, Y Erbas, E Ceulemans, P Kuppens

Psychological Science | SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC | Published : 2019

Abstract

Emotion differentiation, which involves experiencing and labeling emotions in a granular way, has been linked with well-being. It has been theorized that differentiating between emotions facilitates effective emotion regulation, but this link has yet to be comprehensively tested. In two experience-sampling studies, we examined how negative emotion differentiation was related to (a) the selection of emotion-regulation strategies and (b) the effectiveness of these strategies in downregulating negative emotion (Ns = 200 and 101 participants and 34,660 and 6,282 measurements, respectively). Unexpectedly, we found few relationships between differentiation and the selection of putatively adaptive ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This research was supported by KU Leuven (GOA/15/003; OT/11/031) and by a Marie Sklodowska-Curie fellowship (704298) awarded to E. K. Kalokerinos. E. K. Kalokerinos is also supported by an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DE180100352), and Y. Erbas is supported by a Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) Postdoctoral Fellowship.