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The role of expectations and habitual emotion regulation in emotional processing: An ERP investigation. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how expectations and habitual emotion regulation strategies interact during emotional events, particularly looking at event-related potentials (ERPs).
  • Participants engaged in a task with cues indicating the emotional tone of images, revealing that expectations can significantly influence emotional responses.
  • The results show that cognitive reappraisal, a form of emotion regulation, affects emotional processing, while expressive suppression does not have the same impact.

Article Abstract

Available evidence from separate lines of event-related potential (ERP) research has highlighted the role of expectations and emotion regulation on emotional processing by revealing that (i) expectations can alter emotional responses, and (ii) the instructed use of emotion regulation strategies may modulate emotional responses. Yet, little is known about the interplay between expectations and habitual emotion regulation strategies prior to and at the onset of an emotional event. The present study aimed to investigate this potential relationship. Participants completed an affective-cueing task consisting of cues (red squares and blue circles) signaling the likely valence of upcoming target images (negative or neutral). This task allowed us to examine the impact of expectations at 2 temporal stages, Cue Interval and Target Interval, by measuring the late positive potential (LPP) as an index of emotional processing. Habitual use of emotion regulation strategies was assessed through the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (ERQ), which measures the use of cognitive reappraisal and expressive suppression in everyday life. In the Cue Interval, LPP amplitude was greater for negative versus neutral cues (p < .001). In the Target Interval, LPP amplitude was greater for negatively cued versus neutrally cued targets, regardless of target valence (p = .003). ERQ reappraisal, but not suppression, negatively correlated with LPP modulation as a function of cue valence during both intervals (ps < .05). These findings provide novel insights regarding the interplay between expectations and habitual emotion regulation in emotional processing both prior to and at the onset of an emotional event. (PsycINFO Database Record

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/emo0000313DOI Listing

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