Optimal social functioning occasionally requires concealment of one's emotions in order to meet one's immediate goals and environmental demands. However, because emotions serve an important communicative function, their habitual suppression disrupts the flow of social exchanges and, thus, incurs significant interpersonal costs. Evidence is accruing that the disruption in social interactions, linked to habitual expressive suppression use, stems not only from intrapersonal, but also from interpersonal causes, since the suppressors' restricted affective displays reportedly inhibit their interlocutors' emotionally expressive behaviors. However, expressive suppression use is not known to lead to clinically significant social impairments. One exp...
There is a growing appreciation that individuals differ systematically in their use of particular em...
Cognitive reappraisal is a commonly used and highly adaptive strategy for emotion regulation that ha...
Background Successful control of affect partly depends on the capacity to modulate negative emotiona...
Optimal social functioning occasionally requires concealment of one's emotions in order to meet one'...
Emotion regulation is crucial for successfully engaging in social interactions. Yet, little is known...
Emotion regulation is crucial for successfully engaging in social interactions. Yet, little is known...
Emotion regulation is crucial for successfully engaging in social interactions. Yet, little is known...
Emotion regulation is crucial for successfully engaging in social interactions. Yet, little is known...
Emotion Regulation (ER) includes different mechanisms aiming at volitionally modulating emotional re...
Neural substrates of social emotion regulation: a FMRI study on imitation and expressive suppression...
Sociality and individual differences may play an important role in emotional processing. Using behav...
Although it is well established that prior experience with faces determines their subsequent social-...
Studies exploring the neural correlates of the emotion regulation strategy called cognitive change (...
Expressive suppression refers to the inhibition of emotion-expressive behavior (e.g., facial express...
Emotional facial expressions can engender similar expressions in others. However, adaptive social an...
There is a growing appreciation that individuals differ systematically in their use of particular em...
Cognitive reappraisal is a commonly used and highly adaptive strategy for emotion regulation that ha...
Background Successful control of affect partly depends on the capacity to modulate negative emotiona...
Optimal social functioning occasionally requires concealment of one's emotions in order to meet one'...
Emotion regulation is crucial for successfully engaging in social interactions. Yet, little is known...
Emotion regulation is crucial for successfully engaging in social interactions. Yet, little is known...
Emotion regulation is crucial for successfully engaging in social interactions. Yet, little is known...
Emotion regulation is crucial for successfully engaging in social interactions. Yet, little is known...
Emotion Regulation (ER) includes different mechanisms aiming at volitionally modulating emotional re...
Neural substrates of social emotion regulation: a FMRI study on imitation and expressive suppression...
Sociality and individual differences may play an important role in emotional processing. Using behav...
Although it is well established that prior experience with faces determines their subsequent social-...
Studies exploring the neural correlates of the emotion regulation strategy called cognitive change (...
Expressive suppression refers to the inhibition of emotion-expressive behavior (e.g., facial express...
Emotional facial expressions can engender similar expressions in others. However, adaptive social an...
There is a growing appreciation that individuals differ systematically in their use of particular em...
Cognitive reappraisal is a commonly used and highly adaptive strategy for emotion regulation that ha...
Background Successful control of affect partly depends on the capacity to modulate negative emotiona...