Blanke Elisabeth S, Bellingtier Jennifer A, Riediger Michaela, Brose Annette
Department of Psychology, Humboldt-Universität Zu Berlin, 10099 Berlin, Germany.
Department of Developmental Psychology, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Jena, Germany.
Affect Sci. 2021 Dec 10;3(1):81-92. doi: 10.1007/s42761-021-00087-1. eCollection 2022 Mar.
Contextual factors shape emotion regulation (ER). The intensity of emotional stimuli may be such a contextual factor that influences the selection and moderates the effectiveness of ER strategies in reducing negative affect (NA). Prior research has shown that, on average, when emotional stimuli were more intense, distraction was selected over reappraisal (and vice versa). This pattern was previously shown to be adaptive as the preferred strategies were more efficient in the respective contexts. Here, we investigated whether stressor intensity predicted strategy use and effectiveness in similar ways in daily life. We examined five ER strategies (reappraisal, reflection, acceptance, distraction, and rumination) in relation to the intensity of everyday stressors, using two waves of experience-sampling data ( = 156). In accordance with our hypotheses, reappraisal, reflection, and acceptance were used less, and rumination was used more, when stressors were more intense. Moreover, results suggested that distraction was more effective, and rumination more detrimental the higher the stressor intensity. Against our hypotheses, distraction did not covary with stressor intensity, and there was no evidence that reappraisal, reflection, and acceptance were more effective at lower levels of stressor intensity. Instead, when examined individually, reflection and reappraisal (like distraction) were more effective at higher levels of stressor intensity. In sum, stressor intensity predicted ER selection and moderated strategy effectiveness, but the results also point to a more complex ER strategy use in daily life than in the laboratory.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s42761-021-00087-1.
情境因素塑造情绪调节(ER)。情绪刺激的强度可能是这样一种情境因素,它会影响情绪调节策略的选择,并调节这些策略在减少负面影响(NA)方面的有效性。先前的研究表明,平均而言,当情绪刺激更强时,人们会选择分心而非重新评价(反之亦然)。这种模式先前被证明是适应性的,因为首选策略在各自的情境中更有效。在这里,我们研究了压力源强度是否以类似方式预测日常生活中的策略使用和有效性。我们使用两波经验抽样数据(n = 156),考察了五种情绪调节策略(重新评价、反思、接受、分心和沉思)与日常压力源强度的关系。与我们的假设一致,当压力源更强时,重新评价、反思和接受的使用较少,而沉思的使用较多。此外,结果表明,压力源强度越高,分心越有效,沉思越有害。与我们的假设相反,分心与压力源强度没有共变关系,没有证据表明重新评价、反思和接受在较低压力源强度水平下更有效。相反,单独考察时,反思和重新评价(与分心一样)在较高压力源强度水平下更有效。总之,压力源强度预测了情绪调节策略的选择并调节了策略有效性,但结果也表明,日常生活中的情绪调节策略使用比实验室中更为复杂。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s42761-021-00087-1获取的补充材料。