Emotions are currently conceptualized as ongoing temporal processes. Consistent with this view, an important target of attempts at emotion regulation are the temporal characteristics of an emotional response. The process model of emotion regulation (Gross, 1998a) distinguishes between antecedent- and response-focused emotion regulation strategies, depending on when during the unfolding emotional response they act. Two strategies that exemplify this distinction are cognitive reappraisal and expressive suppression. The present study explored the effects of the interaction between habitual engagement in reappraisal and suppression and their voluntary manipulation. Using a between-subjects design, 122 participants selected based on their self-r...
One of the central tenets of emotion theory is that emotions involve coordinated changes across expe...
Time perception, crucial for adaptive behavior, has been shown to be altered by emotion. An arousal-...
Whereas emotion regulation (ER) in response to distressing events is widely studied, the mechanisms ...
Distraction and cognitive reappraisal are two widely used types of emotional regulation strategies t...
The tendency for emotions to be predictable over time, labelled emotional inertia, has been linked t...
Time is given a central place in theoretical models of emotion regulation (Gross, 1998, 2015), but k...
Theoretical accounts of emotion regulation (ER) discriminate various cognitive strategies to volunta...
Despite growing interest in emotion regulation, the degree to which psychophysiological measures of ...
In recent years, there is an increase of papers on emotion regulation (Gross, 2013). However, it is ...
Emotion regulation is a process through which individuals alter the subjective, behavioral and physi...
A widespread assumption in research and clinical practice is that cognitive reappraisal is a healthy...
Time is given a central place in theoretical models of emotion regulation (Gross, 1998, 2015), but k...
The conceptual model of emotion regulation (ER) of Gross and Thompson (2007) introduces families of ...
Emotion regulation is an important process for attaining desired emotional states and has been linke...
One of the central tenets of emotion theory is that emotions involve coordinated changes across expe...
Time perception, crucial for adaptive behavior, has been shown to be altered by emotion. An arousal-...
Whereas emotion regulation (ER) in response to distressing events is widely studied, the mechanisms ...
Distraction and cognitive reappraisal are two widely used types of emotional regulation strategies t...
The tendency for emotions to be predictable over time, labelled emotional inertia, has been linked t...
Time is given a central place in theoretical models of emotion regulation (Gross, 1998, 2015), but k...
Theoretical accounts of emotion regulation (ER) discriminate various cognitive strategies to volunta...
Despite growing interest in emotion regulation, the degree to which psychophysiological measures of ...
In recent years, there is an increase of papers on emotion regulation (Gross, 2013). However, it is ...
Emotion regulation is a process through which individuals alter the subjective, behavioral and physi...
A widespread assumption in research and clinical practice is that cognitive reappraisal is a healthy...
Time is given a central place in theoretical models of emotion regulation (Gross, 1998, 2015), but k...
The conceptual model of emotion regulation (ER) of Gross and Thompson (2007) introduces families of ...
Emotion regulation is an important process for attaining desired emotional states and has been linke...
One of the central tenets of emotion theory is that emotions involve coordinated changes across expe...
Time perception, crucial for adaptive behavior, has been shown to be altered by emotion. An arousal-...
Whereas emotion regulation (ER) in response to distressing events is widely studied, the mechanisms ...