Abstract

Attentional deployment is currently considered as one of the most central mechanisms in emotion regulation (ER) as it is assumed to be a crucial first step in the selection of emotional information. According to the broaden-and-build theory, positive emotions are associated with attentional broadening and negative emotions with attentional narrowing toward emotional information. Given that ER strategies relying on attentional deployment (i.e., rumination, cognitive reappraisal and distraction) have the possibility to influence positive and negative emotions by (re)directing one’s attention, there could be an association with one’s attentional scope. The current study investigated the association between the general (trait) use of three specific ER strategies and visual attentional breadth for positive, negative, and neutral information in a selected sample of 56 adolescents (M = 12.54, SD = 1.72; 49% girls) at risk for developing psychopathology. First, participants self-reported on their overall use of different ER strategies. Next, the previously validated Attentional Breadth Task (ABT) was used to measure visual attention breadth toward emotional information. No evidence was found for the relationship between 2 specific ER strategies (i.e., cognitive reappraisal and rumination) and visual attentional breadth for neutral, positive and negative emotional information. Surprisingly, “distraction” was associated with visual attentional narrowing, which was unrelated to the valence of the emotion. These unexpected results indicate the multifaceted relationship between trait ER, distraction specifically, and visual attentional breadth for emotional information. Future research, especially in younger age groups, could further elaborate on this research domain.

Highlights

  • Since the early 1980s, a growing number of studies have been devoted to the role of emotion regulation (ER) in exploring new research avenues within the field of clinical psychology

  • The current study examined the relationship between the general use of specific ER strategies that rely on attentional deployment and visual attentional breadth for negative, positive, and neutral emotional information in youth at risk for developing psychopathology

  • No evidence was found for the association between trait “cognitive reappraisal” and attentional broadening for emotional information

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Summary

Introduction

Since the early 1980s, a growing number of studies have been devoted to the role of emotion regulation (ER) in exploring new research avenues within the field of clinical psychology. The past few decades, emotion dysregulation has become a topic of increasing interest as it is linked to 75% of the diagnostic categories of psychopathology described by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM 5, Kring and Sloan, 2009). Because of its strong relationship with a plethora of mental health disorders across different age groups, emotion dysregulation has been labeled a transdiagnostic mechanism across psychopathology in both children and adolescents, as well as adults (Kring and Sloan, 2009; Aldao and Nolen-Hoeksema, 2010; Fernandez et al, 2016; Schäfer et al, 2017)

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