| Literature DB >> 30934877 |
Katherine S Young1, Christina F Sandman2, Michelle G Craske3,4.
Abstract
Emotion regulation skills develop substantially across adolescence, a period characterized by emotional challenges and developing regulatory neural circuitry. Adolescence is also a risk period for the new onset of anxiety and depressive disorders, psychopathologies which have long been associated with disruptions in regulation of positive and negative emotions. This paper reviews the current understanding of the role of disrupted emotion regulation in adolescent anxiety and depression, describing findings from self-report, behavioral, peripheral psychophysiological, and neural measures. Self-report studies robustly identified associations between emotion dysregulation and adolescent anxiety and depression. Findings from behavioral and psychophysiological studies are mixed, with some suggestion of specific impairments in reappraisal in anxiety. Results from neuroimaging studies broadly implicate altered functioning of amygdala-prefrontal cortical circuitries, although again, findings are mixed regarding specific patterns of altered neural functioning. Future work may benefit from focusing on designs that contrast effects of specific regulatory strategies, and isolate changes in emotional regulation from emotional reactivity. Approaches to improve treatments based on empirical evidence of disrupted emotion regulation in adolescents are also discussed. Future intervention studies might consider training and measurement of specific strategies in adolescents to better understand the role of emotion regulation as a treatment mechanism.Entities:
Keywords: adolescence; anxiety; depression; emotion regulation; fMRI; psychological treatment; psychophysiology
Year: 2019 PMID: 30934877 PMCID: PMC6523365 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci9040076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Reviewed evidence investigating links between emotion regulation and anxiety and depression in adolescence. Findings are organized according to negative and positive emotion regulation, and by methodology. (dlPFC: dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; dmPFC: dorsomedial prefrontal cortex; IFG: inferior frontal gyrus; IFL: inferior frontal lobule; MFG: middle frontal gyrus; PFC: prefrontal cortex; RSA: respiratory sinus arrhythmia; SFG: superior frontal gyrus; vlPFC: ventrolateral PFC).
| Self-Report | Behavioral | Psychophysiological | Neural (fMRI) |
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| Increased use of ‘adaptive’ strategies, less use of ‘maladaptive’ strategies with age [ | Reappraisal, but not distraction, improves linearly with age (ability does not always correlate with self-reported everyday use [ | Some evidence of age-related changes in RSA across adolescence [ | Reduced amygdala reactivity with age [ |
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| Associations with symptoms of anxiety | |||
| More use of ‘maladaptive’ and less use of ‘adaptive’ strategies in anxiety disorders [ | Impaired reappraisal generation in anxiety disorders [ | Greater number of visual fixations during negative images [ | Positive amygdala–vlPFC connectivity during affect labeling predicted future anxiety symptoms [ |
| Associations with symptoms of depression | |||
| More use of ‘maladaptive’, less use of ‘adaptive’ strategies in depression [ | Mixed findings for reappraisal efficacy [ | Changes in RSA with age, linked to better ‘acceptance’, ‘impulse control’ and ‘ability to use emotion regulation strategies’ [ | Evidence of disrupted activation and connectivity across emotion regulation neural circuitry (e.g., amygdala, PFC) in depression, but specific patterns of effects vary across studies ([ |
| Impacts link between stress and psychopathology | |||
| Self-blame, catastrophizing, and rumination mediates the association between stress and depression [ | Cognitive reappraisal mediates link between depressive symptoms and ‘emotional recovery’ from an experimental stressor [ | RSA mediates the association between stress and anxiety [ | Amygdala–vlPFC connectivity during incidental emotion regulation mediates the relationship between rumination and depressive symptoms [ |
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| Associations with symptoms of anxiety | |||
| Not investigated | Not investigated | Greater number of visual fixations during positive images in adolescents with anxiety disorders [ | Not investigated |
| Associations with symptoms of depression | |||
| Lower levels and shorter duration of positive affect [ | Reduced persistence of positive affect in conflict situation [ | Not investigated | Reduced activation of ventral striatum and PFC in response to reward (Forbes, 2011 #123 [ |
| Impacts link between stress and psychopathology | |||
| Not investigated | Not investigated | Not investigated | Not investigated |
Overview of subscales across self-report measures of negative emotion regulation. Strategies are informally categorized as ‘adaptive’, ‘maladaptive’ or ‘uncategorized’ (describing more general emotion regulation behavior, rather than specific strategies). ERQ: Emotion Regulation Questionnaire; DERS: Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale; CERQ: Cognitive Emotion Regulations Questionnaire; FEEL-KJ: Fragebogen zur Ehrebung her Emotionsregulation bei Kindern und Jugenlichen.
| ERQ | DERS | CERQ | FEEL-KJ |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Reappraisal | Positive reappraisal | Revaluation | |
| Non-acceptance | Acceptance | Acceptance | |
| Putting in perspective | |||
| Positive refocusing | |||
| Refocus on planning | |||
| Problem solving | |||
| Cognitive problem solving | |||
| Distraction | |||
| Forgetting | |||
| Humor enhancement | |||
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| Expressive suppression | Emotional control | ||
| Self-blame | Self-devaluation | ||
| Other-blame | |||
| Rumination | Rumination | ||
| Catastrophizing | |||
| Giving-up | |||
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| Goal-directed behavior | |||
| Impulse control | Aggressive actions | ||
| Emotional awareness | |||
| Accessing regulation strategies | |||
| Emotional clarity | |||
| Withdrawal | |||
| Social support | |||
| Expression | |||
Comparison of the methodological limitations of different study designs used to assess emotion regulation across levels of analysis. SR: self-report; Beh: behavioral; PP: peripheral psychophysiological; Neu: neural.
| SR: Questionnaire | SR: Experience Sampling | Beh: Stressful Situation | Beh: Observed Interactions | Beh/PP/Neu: Spontaneous Regulation | Beh/PP/Neu: Deliberate Regulation | Neu: Implicit Regulation | |
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| Varying content across measures | x | x | |||||
| Limited assessment of positive vs. negative affect | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| Retrospective bias | x | ||||||
| Socially desirable responding | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| Conflates emotional reactivity and regulation | x | x | x | x | |||
| Assumes accurate insight into regulatory strategy | x | x | |||||
| Lacks ecological validity | x | x | x | ||||
Figure 1Patterns of altered neural activation and connectivity during emotion regulation in adolescents with depression. Overall, studies to date have demonstrated altered activation and connectivity in the amygdala and across regions of prefrontal cortex. The directionality of effects (greater or lesser in depressed compared to non-depressed participants), and the specific set of regions involved however varies across studies. (PFC: prefrontal cortex, dm/dlPFC: dorsomedial/dorsolateral PFC)