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DOI: 10.1177/0956797611418350
OpenAccess: Closed
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Emotion-Regulation Choice

Gal Sheppes,Susanne Scheibe,Gaurav Suri,James J. Gross

Psychology
Disengagement theory
Distraction
2011
Despite centuries of speculation about how to manage negative emotions, little is actually known about which emotion-regulation strategies people choose to use when confronted with negative situations of varying intensity. On the basis of a new process conception of emotion regulation, we hypothesized that in low-intensity negative situations, people would show a relative preference to choose to regulate emotions by engagement reappraisal, which allows emotional processing. However, we expected people in high-intensity negative situations to show a relative preference to choose to regulate emotions by disengagement distraction, which blocks emotional processing at an early stage before it gathers force. In three experiments, we created emotional contexts that varied in intensity, using either emotional pictures (Experiments 1 and 2) or unpredictable electric stimulation (Experiment 3). In response to these emotional contexts, participants chose between using either reappraisal or distraction as an emotion-regulation strategy. Results in all experiments supported our hypothesis. This pattern in the choice of emotion-regulation strategies has important implications for the understanding of healthy adaptation.
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    Emotion-Regulation Choice” is a paper by Gal Sheppes Susanne Scheibe Gaurav Suri James J. Gross published in 2011. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.