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Momentary Emotion Goals and Spontaneous Emotion Regulation in Daily Life: An Ecological Momentary Assessment Study of Desire for High Versus Low Arousal Positive Emotion. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent research shows that how people handle emotions varies among individuals and situations, influenced by both personal traits and contexts.
  • A study investigated whether people's desire for high versus low arousal positive emotions affected their choice of emotion regulation strategies.
  • Findings revealed that wanting more arousal led to increased use of certain strategies like distraction and suppression, but these strategies did not effectively enhance either high or low arousal positive emotions.

Article Abstract

Recent research has highlighted that emotion regulation strategy use varies both between and within people, and specific individual and contextual differences shape strategy use. Further, use of specific emotion regulation strategies relates to a wide array of differential outcomes, including mental health and behavior. Emotion goals (desire for a given emotion state) are thought to play a particularly important role in shaping people's use of emotion regulation strategies; yet, surprisingly little is known about whether and how momentary emotion goals predict spontaneous strategy use in daily life. In the present investigation, we examined whether ideal desire for high versus low arousal positive affect was associated with subsequent use of specific emotion regulation strategies. Undergraduate participants (final = 101) completed ecological momentary assessments (final s = 1,932 for contemporaneous analyses, 1,386 for time-lagged analyses) of their momentary experienced affect, momentary desire for high versus low arousal positive affect, and emotion regulation. Desire for higher arousal predicted greater use of three disengagement strategies: distraction, expressive suppression, and experiential suppression. None of these strategies, though, were associated with sustained enhancement of high arousal (or low arousal) positive affect. These findings point to a possible disconnect between the strategies that people tend to use when they want to feel more arousal and the affective outcomes associated with use of those strategies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9382989PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s42761-022-00108-7DOI Listing

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