Difficulties in emotion regulation: The role of repetitive negative thinking and metacognitive beliefs.

J Affect Disord

Department of Psychology, Sigmund Freud University, Ripa di Porta Ticinese 77, 20143 Milan, Italy; Studi Cognitivi, Cognitive Psychotherapy School and Research Center Milan, Foro Buonaparte 57, 20121 Milan, Italy.

Published: July 2022

Background: Using the Self-Regulatory Executive Function model as a basis, this study explored whether, in both general population and clinical samples, metacognitive beliefs and repetitive negative thinking (i.e., rumination and worry) are associated with higher levels of emotion dysregulation.

Methods: 395 participants from the general population and 388 outpatients seeking psychological treatment were recruited. Emotion dysregulation, metacognitive beliefs, rumination, worry, anxiety, depression, personality disorders were assessed. ANOVA and Welch's tests, correlation and path analyses were run.

Results: Repetitive negative thinking was found to play a mediating role in the relationship between metacognitive beliefs and emotion dysregulation in both general population and clinical samples. Moreover, metacognitive beliefs were found to be directly associated to emotion dysregulation.

Limitations: The cross-sectional design.

Conclusions: Emotion dysregulation appears to be associated with the tendency to engage in repetitive negative thinking and metacognitive beliefs. Repetitive negative thinking and metacognitive beliefs could be a suitable therapeutic target to reduce difficulties in emotion regulation.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2022.04.086DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

metacognitive beliefs
28
repetitive negative
20
negative thinking
20
thinking metacognitive
12
general population
12
emotion dysregulation
12
difficulties emotion
8
emotion regulation
8
population clinical
8
clinical samples
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!