Abstract

Contextual factors shape emotion regulation (ER). The intensity of emotional stimuli may be such a contextual factor that influences the selection and moderates the effectiveness of ER strategies in reducing negative affect (NA). Prior research has shown that, on average, when emotional stimuli were more intense, distraction was selected over reappraisal (and vice versa). This pattern was previously shown to be adaptive as the preferred strategies were more efficient in the respective contexts. Here, we investigated whether stressor intensity predicted strategy use and effectiveness in similar ways in daily life. We examined five ER strategies (reappraisal, reflection, acceptance, distraction, and rumination) in relation to the intensity of everyday stressors, using two waves of experience-sampling data (N = 156). In accordance with our hypotheses, reappraisal, reflection, and acceptance were used less, and rumination was used more, when stressors were more intense. Moreover, results suggested that distraction was more effective, and rumination more detrimental the higher the stressor intensity. Against our hypotheses, distraction did not covary with stressor intensity, and there was no evidence that reappraisal, reflection, and acceptance were more effective at lower levels of stressor intensity. Instead, when examined individually, reflection and reappraisal (like distraction) were more effective at higher levels of stressor intensity. In sum, stressor intensity predicted ER selection and moderated strategy effectiveness, but the results also point to a more complex ER strategy use in daily life than in the laboratory.

Highlights

  • Emotion regulation (ER) describes various processes pertaining to the modulation of emotions (Gross, 1998)

  • To investigate strategy selection (H1), emotion regulation (ER) strategies were treated as outcomes and stressor intensity as the predictor

  • With regard to strategy effectiveness, we further hypothesized that all strategies would interact with stressor intensity in their association with change in negative affect (NA), albeit in different ways: We hypothesized that the effectiveness of distraction and the detrimental effect of rumination would be pronounced when dealing with higher intensity stressors

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Summary

Introduction

Emotion regulation (ER) describes various processes pertaining to the modulation of emotions (Gross, 1998). According to the process model of ER, reappraisal entails engaging with the emotional content and changing its meaning (Gross, 1998, 2015) As this requires cognitive resource expenditure, reappraisal should be selected less when dealing with highly emotionally intense information, but it should be less likely to be effective Proposed by the ER process model, attentional disengagement strategies, such as distraction, are aimed at diverting attention from emotional information This may require less cognitive resource expenditure, so that individuals select distraction more readily in the face of emotionally intense information, and it may be more effective in regulating NA than reappraisal in this situation (Sheppes, 2020). In line with the ER choice paradigm, we expected that ER strategy use and effectiveness would vary depending on stressor intensity

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