Monday, March 01, 2021

On Emotion Regulation

 

 

On Emotion Regulation

 

Excerpts from The Temporal Deployment of Emotion Regulation Strategies during Negative Emotional Episodes [1]

 


Strategies to regulate emotion come in many different shapes and forms, and a primary goal of emotion regulation theory has been organizing these diverse  strategies into coherent groups. One of the primary theoretical models for accomplishing this task has been Gross’ process model (Gross, 1998b, 2015) [2] , which  posits that time is a defining feature of emotion regulation.

 

The process model  is based on the modal model of emotion, which specifies four sequential steps

involved in emotion generation:

 (a) an emotional situation arises;

(b) attention  is directed toward the situation;

 (c) an appraisal of the situation is formed; and finally

(d) an emotional response to the situation is generated (Gross & Thompson, 2007) [3] .

 

The process model specifies five families of emotion regulation strategies, grouped based on the sequential step of the emotion generation process at which they exert their primary impact.

 

In temporal order, the first and second  families are situation selection and situation modification, which have their primary impact on the emotional situation.

 

The third family is attentional deployment, which includes strategies that exert their primary impact on attentional processes, such as distraction and rumination.

 

 The fourth family is cognitive change, which includes strategies that exert their primary impact onappraisal processes, such as cognitive reappraisal.

 

The fifth and final family is response modulation, which includes strategies that exert their primary impact on the emotional response, such as expressive suppression (Gross, 1998b).

 

REFERENCES:

[1]  Kalokerinos, Résibois, Verduyn, Kuppens, ‘The Temporal Deployment of Emotion Regulation Strategies during Negative Emotional Episodes’

[2]  Gross, J. J. (1998b). The emerging field of emotion regulation: An integrative review. Review of General Psychology, 2, 271-299.

[3]  Gross, J. J., & Thompson, R. A. (2007). Emotion regulation: Conceptual foundations Handbook of emotion regulation (pp. 3-24). New York, NY, US: Guilford Press.

 

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