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Int J Psychophysiol · Nov 2007
Individual differences in cognitive reappraisal: experiential and physiological responses to an anger provocation.
- Iris B Mauss, Crystal L Cook, Jennifer Y J Cheng, and James J Gross.
- Department of Psychology, University of Denver, 2155 South Race Street, Denver, CO 80208, USA. imauss@psy.du.edu
- Int J Psychophysiol. 2007 Nov 1;66(2):116-24.
AbstractEffective emotion regulation is widely seen as vital for healthy adaptation. There remains considerable uncertainty, however, as to what constitutes effective emotion regulation. One promising emotion regulation strategy is cognitive reappraisal, which involves reframing emotional events so as to decrease their emotional impact. This strategy is useful because it seems to enable individuals to down-regulate negative feelings without the physiological costs that are associated with other forms of emotion regulation. It remains unknown, however, whether individual differences in the use of reappraisal are associated with experiential and physiological responses to anger-inducing situations. To examine this question, individuals either high or low in reappraisal were made angry in the laboratory while emotion experience and cardiovascular responses were assessed. Results indicated that compared to low reappraisers, high reappraisers had a more adaptive profile of emotion experience and cardiovascular responding. Specifically, across baseline and provocation periods, high reappraisers reported less anger, less negative emotion, and more positive emotion, showed greater cardiac output and ventricular contractility, and lesser total peripheral resistance. These findings suggest that reappraisers are successful at down-regulating negative emotions, even in the context of a potent negative emotion such as anger.
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