| Literature DB >> 30328075 |
Anna Vannucci1, Laura Finan2, Christine McCauley Ohannessian3,4, Howard Tennen5, Andres De Los Reyes6, Songqi Liu7.
Abstract
The daily emotional experiences of adolescents are dynamic, vary significantly across individuals, and are crucial to their psychological adjustment, warranting a need to identify factors that promote adaptive affective responses to stressors and attenuated affective instability. The objective of this study, therefore, was to examine protective factors linked to individual differences in daily affective reactivity and instability utilizing a daily diary design in a national sample of 100 U.S. adolescents (13-17 years; 40% girls; 79% White). Adolescents completed a baseline survey and then 14 daily online surveys. Better mother-adolescent communication predicted lower negative affect reactivity, whereas greater use of problem-focused coping strategies predicted higher positive affect reactivity. Greater trait resilience and instrumental support seeking predicted lower negative affect instability. Conversely, more emotional support seeking predicted higher negative affect instability. No factors were associated with positive affect instability, and father-adolescent communication was unrelated to daily affective reactivity and instability. The findings implicate specific protective factors associated with distinct aspects of affective reactivity and instability.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Affective instability; Affective reactivity; Coping; Emotion regulation; Resilience
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30328075 PMCID: PMC6454917 DOI: 10.1007/s10964-018-0943-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Youth Adolesc ISSN: 0047-2891