People generally share their emotions with others and believe that they will recover from their emotions after having talked about them. The aims of the present studies were to examine whether (1) talking about a specific emotional episode really facilitates emotional recovery ('recovery' effect) and (2) talking about emotions leads to perceived benefits ('perceived benefits'). Consistently in the two studies, a decrease of emotional impact was found over time for participants in all conditions. Contrary to expectations, participants assigned to talk about their emotions did not demonstrate beneficial recovery effects at 3 or 7 days or 2 months compared with participants assigned to a factual description of the event (experiment 1), to the ...
Scholarly research has shown that the discursive expression of emotional distress alleviates the neg...
<div><p>How can we best support others in difficult times? Studies testing the effects of supportive...
This investigation examined how people's beliefs about the functionality of emotion shape their emot...
Social sharing of emotion is a very common long-term consequence of emotional experiences. Despite t...
When individuals experience an emotion, they talk about it afterwards. A popular ‘emotional venting’...
Negative emotions associated with event memories fade in intensity to a greater extent over time tha...
Data showed that emotional episodes nearly universally elicit a need to talk about it with other peo...
Two longitudinal studies assessed whether disclosure of emotions facilitates recovery from bereaveme...
Following an emotional episode individuals need to talk about their experiences in a repetitive proc...
Two longitudinal studies assessed whether disclosure of emotions facilitates recovery from bereaveme...
Rime et af. (1992) showed that most emotional experiences are shared with others shortly after they ...
Social sharing of emotion 2 Rimé, Philippot, Boca, and Mesquita (1992) showed that most emotio...
People often socially share their emotions to regulate them. Two-mode theory of social sharing state...
People often discuss events they have seen and these discussions can influence later recollections. ...
We argue that emotion cannot only be conceived of as a short-lived and intrapersonal phenomenon. Rat...
Scholarly research has shown that the discursive expression of emotional distress alleviates the neg...
<div><p>How can we best support others in difficult times? Studies testing the effects of supportive...
This investigation examined how people's beliefs about the functionality of emotion shape their emot...
Social sharing of emotion is a very common long-term consequence of emotional experiences. Despite t...
When individuals experience an emotion, they talk about it afterwards. A popular ‘emotional venting’...
Negative emotions associated with event memories fade in intensity to a greater extent over time tha...
Data showed that emotional episodes nearly universally elicit a need to talk about it with other peo...
Two longitudinal studies assessed whether disclosure of emotions facilitates recovery from bereaveme...
Following an emotional episode individuals need to talk about their experiences in a repetitive proc...
Two longitudinal studies assessed whether disclosure of emotions facilitates recovery from bereaveme...
Rime et af. (1992) showed that most emotional experiences are shared with others shortly after they ...
Social sharing of emotion 2 Rimé, Philippot, Boca, and Mesquita (1992) showed that most emotio...
People often socially share their emotions to regulate them. Two-mode theory of social sharing state...
People often discuss events they have seen and these discussions can influence later recollections. ...
We argue that emotion cannot only be conceived of as a short-lived and intrapersonal phenomenon. Rat...
Scholarly research has shown that the discursive expression of emotional distress alleviates the neg...
<div><p>How can we best support others in difficult times? Studies testing the effects of supportive...
This investigation examined how people's beliefs about the functionality of emotion shape their emot...