Marroquín Brett, Czamanski-Cohen Johanna, Weihs Karen L, Stanton Annette L
Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, 1285 Franz Hall, Box 951563, Los Angeles, CA, 90095, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and University of Arizona Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
J Behav Med. 2016 Oct;39(5):832-44. doi: 10.1007/s10865-016-9751-9. Epub 2016 Jun 10.
Among individuals coping with cancer, emotional approach coping-expressing and processing emotions following negative events-has been identified as a potentially adaptive form of emotion regulation. However, its mental health benefits may depend on social-cognitive factors and on how it is implemented. This study examined loneliness as a determinant of emotion regulation associations with depressive symptoms in women with breast cancer. Loneliness was examined as an implicit social-cognitive phenomenon (i.e., automatic views of oneself as lonely), and emotional expression and processing were examined as both explicit and implicit processes. Approximately 11 months after diagnosis, 390 women completed explicit measures of coping through cancer-related emotional expression and processing; an implicit measure of expression and processing (an essay-writing task submitted to linguistic analysis); and an implicit association test measuring loneliness. Depressive symptoms were assessed 3 months later. Regardless of implicit loneliness, self-reported emotional expression (but not emotional processing) predicted fewer depressive symptoms, whereas implicit expression of negative emotion during essay-writing predicted more symptoms. Only among women high in implicit loneliness, less positive emotional expression and more causal processing during the writing task predicted more depressive symptoms. Results suggest that explicit and implicit breast cancer-related emotion regulation have distinct relations with depressive symptoms, and implicit loneliness moderates effects of implicit emotional approach. Findings support implicit processes as influential mechanisms of emotion regulation and suggest targets for intervention among breast cancer survivors.
在应对癌症的个体中,情绪应对方式——在负面事件后表达和处理情绪——已被确定为一种潜在的适应性情绪调节形式。然而,其对心理健康的益处可能取决于社会认知因素以及实施方式。本研究考察了孤独感作为乳腺癌女性情绪调节与抑郁症状之间关联的决定因素。孤独感被视为一种内隐的社会认知现象(即自动将自己视为孤独的观念),而情绪表达和处理则被考察为外显和内隐过程。在确诊后约11个月,390名女性完成了通过与癌症相关的情绪表达和处理进行应对的外显测量;情绪表达和处理的内隐测量(一项提交给语言分析的写作任务);以及一项测量孤独感的内隐联想测验。3个月后评估抑郁症状。无论内隐孤独感如何,自我报告的情绪表达(而非情绪处理)预示着较少的抑郁症状,而写作过程中负面情绪的内隐表达则预示着更多症状。仅在高内隐孤独感的女性中,写作任务中较少的积极情绪表达和较多的因果处理预示着更多的抑郁症状。结果表明,与乳腺癌相关的外显和内隐情绪调节与抑郁症状有着不同的关系,内隐孤独感调节内隐情绪应对方式的影响。研究结果支持内隐过程作为情绪调节的影响机制,并为乳腺癌幸存者提出了干预目标。