Literature DB >> 15509284

Healthy and unhealthy emotion regulation: personality processes, individual differences, and life span development.

Oliver P John1, James J Gross.   

Abstract

Individuals regulate their emotions in a wide variety of ways. Are some forms of emotion regulation healthier than others? We focus on two commonly used emotion regulation strategies: reappraisal (changing the way one thinks about a potentially emotion-eliciting event) and suppression (changing the way one responds behaviorally to an emotion-eliciting event). In the first section, we review experimental findings showing that reappraisal has a healthier profile of short-term affective, cognitive, and social consequences than suppression. In the second section, we review individual-difference findings, which show that using reappraisal to regulate emotions is associated with healthier patterns of affect, social functioning, and well-being than is using suppression. In the third section, we consider issues in the development of reappraisal and suppression and provide new evidence for a normative shift toward an increasingly healthy emotion regulation profile during adulthood (i.e., increases in the use of reappraisal and decreases in the use of suppression).

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15509284     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-6494.2004.00298.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pers        ISSN: 0022-3506


  258 in total

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