Emotion regulation strategy selection in daily life: The role of social context and goals

被引:0
|
作者
Tammy English
Ihno A. Lee
Oliver P. John
James J. Gross
机构
[1] Washington University in St. Louis,Department of Psychological and Brain Science
[2] Stanford University,Department of Psychology
[3] University of California,Department of Psychology, Institute of Personality and Social Research
[4] Berkeley,undefined
来源
Motivation and Emotion | 2017年 / 41卷
关键词
Emotion regulation; Emotion; Goals; Motivation; Relationships;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Recent studies have begun to document the diversity of ways people regulate their emotions. However, one unanswered question is why people regulate their emotions as they do in everyday life. In the present research, we examined how social context and goals influence strategy selection in daily high points and low points. As expected, suppression was particularly tied to social features of context: it was used more when others were present, especially non-close partners, and when people had instrumental goals, especially more interpersonal ones (e.g., avoid conflict). Distraction and reappraisal were used more when regulating for hedonic reasons (e.g., to feel better), but these strategies were also linked to certain instrumental goals (e.g., getting work done). When contra-hedonic regulation occurred, it primarily took the form of dampening positive emotion during high points. Suppression was more likely to be used for contra-hedonic regulation, whereas reappraisal and distraction were used more for pro-hedonic regulation. Overall, these findings highlight the social nature of emotion regulation and underscore the importance of examining regulation in both positive and negative contexts.
引用
收藏
页码:230 / 242
页数:12
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