Past event-related potentials (ERPs) research shows that, after exerting effortful emotion inhibition, the neural correlates of performance monitoring (e.g. error-related negativity) were weakened. An undetermined issue is whether all forms of emotion regulation uniformly impair later performance monitoring. The present study compared the cognitive consequences of two emotion regulation strategies, namely suppression and reappraisal. Participants were instructed to suppress their emotions while watching a sad movie, or to adopt a neutral and objective attitude toward the movie, or to just watch the movie carefully. Then after a mood scale, all participants completed an ostensibly unrelated Stroop task, during which ERPs (i.e. error-related ...
The current event-related potential study investigated the modulation effects of different emotion r...
The present study investigated the effect of emotion on response inhibition and error monitoring usi...
honors thesisCollege of Social & Behavioral SciencePsychologyJason M. WatsonThe objective of this st...
Past event-related potentials (ERPs) research shows that, after exerting effortful emotion inhibitio...
Traditional models of cognitive control have explained performance monitoring as a "cold" cognitive ...
Distraction and cognitive reappraisal are two widely used types of emotional regulation strategies t...
Individuals who suppress their emotions experience less positive emotions, worse relationships, and ...
The ability to exert control over emotions, termed emotion regulation (ER), is vital for everyday fu...
Reappraisal is an emotion regulation strategy which involves changing the interpretation of emotiona...
This study investigates how the working memory (WM) load influenced the efficacy of cognitive reap...
Previous studies have found differences in the cognitive and neural mechanisms between cognitive rea...
Theoretical accounts of emotion regulation (ER) discriminate various cognitive strategies to volunta...
The neural mechanism of emotion regulation had been widely concerned while still unclear. Therefore,...
Previous research has suggested that regulating emotions through reappraisal does not incur cognitiv...
The error-related negativity (ERN) is an event-related brain potential observed when subjects commit...
The current event-related potential study investigated the modulation effects of different emotion r...
The present study investigated the effect of emotion on response inhibition and error monitoring usi...
honors thesisCollege of Social & Behavioral SciencePsychologyJason M. WatsonThe objective of this st...
Past event-related potentials (ERPs) research shows that, after exerting effortful emotion inhibitio...
Traditional models of cognitive control have explained performance monitoring as a "cold" cognitive ...
Distraction and cognitive reappraisal are two widely used types of emotional regulation strategies t...
Individuals who suppress their emotions experience less positive emotions, worse relationships, and ...
The ability to exert control over emotions, termed emotion regulation (ER), is vital for everyday fu...
Reappraisal is an emotion regulation strategy which involves changing the interpretation of emotiona...
This study investigates how the working memory (WM) load influenced the efficacy of cognitive reap...
Previous studies have found differences in the cognitive and neural mechanisms between cognitive rea...
Theoretical accounts of emotion regulation (ER) discriminate various cognitive strategies to volunta...
The neural mechanism of emotion regulation had been widely concerned while still unclear. Therefore,...
Previous research has suggested that regulating emotions through reappraisal does not incur cognitiv...
The error-related negativity (ERN) is an event-related brain potential observed when subjects commit...
The current event-related potential study investigated the modulation effects of different emotion r...
The present study investigated the effect of emotion on response inhibition and error monitoring usi...
honors thesisCollege of Social & Behavioral SciencePsychologyJason M. WatsonThe objective of this st...