| Literature DB >> 30853920 |
Wen Liu1, Fang Liu1, Liang Chen2, Zhongqing Jiang1, Junchen Shang1.
Abstract
Emotion regulation is a critical mechanism in the socio-emotional development of children. Previous studies revealed that children use cognitive reappraisal to downregulate negative emotions. Moreover, the amplitude of late positive potential (LPP) shows a more obvious reduction following neutral interpretations than following negative interpretations. However, whether children can use cognitive reappraisal to regulate positive emotions remains unclear. In the present study, 46 8- to 12-year-old children were asked to reappraise the meaning of pleasant pictures. Electroencephalography (EEG) data were collected during the task. As predicted, LPP amplitudes increased more following reappraisal condition than following pleasant condition. The analysis of spatial-temporal shifting patterns showed that the effect occurred in the earlier window for the posterior region. As time progressed, this effect evidenced a trend from posterior region to the central and anterior regions, especially for the younger children. Furthermore, the greater brain activations occurred in left hemisphere when children upregulated positive emotions which partially supported previous research suggesting that increasing positive emotion engaged primarily left-lateralized prefrontal regions. Taken together, the findings suggest that children can use cognitive reappraisal to upregulate positive emotions.Entities:
Keywords: LPP; children; cognitive reappraisal; emotion regulation; positive emotion
Year: 2019 PMID: 30853920 PMCID: PMC6396714 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00147
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
FIGURE 1Schematic representation of the experimental procedure.
Means and SD of LPP amplitudes following three conditions in three time windows and regions.
| Early (300–600 ms) | |||
| Left/Right posterior | 6.06/5.59 (3.30/3.04) | 6.62/6.11 (3.00/2.77) | 6.78/6.26 (2.91/2.68) |
| Left/Right central | −2.70/−2.49 (1.99/1.84) | −2.71/−2.50 (1.96/1.81) | −2.57/−2.37 (1.72/1.59) |
| Left/Right anterior | −5.41/−4.99 (2.85/2.63) | −5.00/−4.62 (2.68/2.47) | −4.69/−4.33 (2.58/2.38) |
| Left/Right posterior | 2.16/2.00 (2.20/2.05) | 2.26/2.09 (2.15/1.99) | 2.29/2.21 (1.97/1.82) |
| Left/Right central | −0.56/−0.52 (1.72/1.59) | −0.04/−0.04 (1.59/1.47) | 0.06/0.05 (1.27/1.17) |
| Left/Right anterior | −3.01/−2.78 (2.92/2.70) | −2.12/−1.96 (2.79/2.57) | −1.48/−1.37 (2.29/2.12) |
| Left/Right posterior | 1.76/1.63 (1.58/1.46) | 1.90/1.76 (1.40/1.30) | 2.09/1.94 (1.40/1.30) |
| Left/Right central | −0.61/−0.56 (1.21/1.12) | −0.47/−0.43 (1.11/1.02) | −0.27/−0.25 (0.96/0.88) |
| Left/Right anterior | −1.98/−1.83 (1.84/1.70) | −1.71/−1.57 (1.85/1.71) | −1.41/−1.30 (1.62/1.50) |
FIGURE 2LPP in each region for neutral, pleasant pictures, and positive cognitive reappraisal condition.
FIGURE 3Increasing age in months was associated with a greater increase in mean LPP amplitudes in the reappraisal vs. pleasant condition (22 children).