Emotion regulation and mania risk: Differential responses to implicit and explicit cues to regulate

Literatuur

Background and objectives: People prone to mania use emotion regulation (ER) strategies well when explicitly coached to do so in laboratory settings, but they find these strategies ineffective in daily life. We hypothesized that, compared with control participants, mania-prone people would show ER deficits when they received implicit, but not explicit, cues to use ER.Methods: Undergraduates (N = 66) completed the Hypomanic Personality Scale (HPS) and were randomly assigned to one of three experimental conditions: automatic ER (scrambled sentence primes), deliberate ER (verbal instructions), or control (no priming or instructions to use ER). Then, participants played a videogame designed to evoke anger. Emotion responses were measured with a multi-modal assessment of self-reported affect, psychophysiology, and facial expressions. Respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) was used to index ER.Results: The videogame effectively elicited subjective anger, angry facial expressions, and heart rate increases when keys malfunctioned. As hypothesized, persons who were more mania prone showed greater RSA increases in the deliberate ER condition than in the automatic or control conditions.Limitations: One potential limitation is the use of an analog sample.Conclusions: Findings suggest that those at risk for mania require more explicit instruction to engage ER effectively. (c) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Auteur(s)
Ajaya, Yatrika; Peckham, Andrew D.; Johnson, Sheri L.
Jaar
2016
Bron
JOURNAL OF BEHAVIOR THERAPY AND EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHIATRY Volume: 50 Pages: 283-288