A commonly used strategy for regulating emotions is known as expressive suppression (ES), in which a person attempts to conceal ongoing emotion-expressive behavior. ES has been frequently studied in adults and ample evidence indicates that it is linked to a host of negative outcomes, including depression and anxiety, suicide ideation, worse relationship and social functioning, cognitive impairment, and negative health outcomes. Relatively little is known about ES in children, despite the potential for ES to have lasting consequences on development (e.g., by contributing to a negative developmental cascade in which poor emotion regulation interferes with emerging competencies). The present study used a multi-method approach to investigate th...
SummaryThe current study sought to examine whether children's spontaneous use of the emotion regulat...
Recently there has been increasing interest in the role that emotionality plays in children’s social...
The present study examined the effects of expressive suppression and emotion suppression on affect, ...
The present study examined the relationship between sub-clinical depressive symptoms and children's ...
Behaviorally inhibited children are predisposed toward social difficulties, but other environmental ...
Negative emotion differentiation (NED) refers to experiencing negative emotions as being different f...
Frequent use of expressive suppression to regulate one’s emotions can impair long-term health and we...
Effective regulation of emotion is one of the most important skills that develops in childhood. Rese...
Children interact with peers in their daily lives and sometimes help, share, or otherwise do somethi...
A deficit in emotion regulation skills could be an important factor influencing the vulnerability an...
Background: Maladaptive emotion regulation strategies are predictive of negative outcomes in adolesc...
& Psychologists consider emotion regulation a critical devel-opmental acquisition. Yet, there ha...
This study examined children's spontaneous use of behavioral emotion regulation (ER) strategies and ...
The present research relied on the Process Model of Emotion Regulation (PMER, Gross, 2007) to invest...
Deliberate Emotion Regulation (ER), the effortful regulation of emotions, is strongly linked to psyc...
SummaryThe current study sought to examine whether children's spontaneous use of the emotion regulat...
Recently there has been increasing interest in the role that emotionality plays in children’s social...
The present study examined the effects of expressive suppression and emotion suppression on affect, ...
The present study examined the relationship between sub-clinical depressive symptoms and children's ...
Behaviorally inhibited children are predisposed toward social difficulties, but other environmental ...
Negative emotion differentiation (NED) refers to experiencing negative emotions as being different f...
Frequent use of expressive suppression to regulate one’s emotions can impair long-term health and we...
Effective regulation of emotion is one of the most important skills that develops in childhood. Rese...
Children interact with peers in their daily lives and sometimes help, share, or otherwise do somethi...
A deficit in emotion regulation skills could be an important factor influencing the vulnerability an...
Background: Maladaptive emotion regulation strategies are predictive of negative outcomes in adolesc...
& Psychologists consider emotion regulation a critical devel-opmental acquisition. Yet, there ha...
This study examined children's spontaneous use of behavioral emotion regulation (ER) strategies and ...
The present research relied on the Process Model of Emotion Regulation (PMER, Gross, 2007) to invest...
Deliberate Emotion Regulation (ER), the effortful regulation of emotions, is strongly linked to psyc...
SummaryThe current study sought to examine whether children's spontaneous use of the emotion regulat...
Recently there has been increasing interest in the role that emotionality plays in children’s social...
The present study examined the effects of expressive suppression and emotion suppression on affect, ...