E-Book Overview
Emotion regulation (ER), which refers to the ability to identify, experience, modulate, and express emotions, is critical to adaptive functioning. Although the term ER has been used synonymously with coping strategies, affect regulation, and self-regulation, it is important to differentiate ER from these other constructs to ensure optimal construct validity and accurate measurement. To this end, ER has been defined as “the process by which individuals influence which emotions they have, when they have them, and how they experience and express these emotions” (Gross, 1998 p. 275). Emotion is experienced in three primary ways: behaviorally, physiologically, and experientially (Gross, 1998); therefore, ER refers to strategies that alter these three aforementioned emotional processes. This book discusses the processes, cognitive effects, and social consequences of emotion regulation.
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CONTENTS Preface Chapter 1
A Review of Laboratory-based Emotion Regulation Tasks Tanya Saraiya and Kate Walsh
Chapter 2
Emotion Dysregulation and Risky, Self-destructive, and Health Compromising Behaviors: A Review of the Literature Nicole H. Weiss, Tami P. Sullivan and Matthew T. Tull
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Mechanisms of Social Emotion Regulation: From Neuroscience to Psychotherapy Alessandro Grecucci, Anthony Theuninck, Jon Frederickson and Remo Job Emotion Regulation in Adolescent Depression: A Developmental Psychopathology Perspective Marie-Lotte Van Beveren and Caroline Braet
1
37
57
85
Chapter 5
Alexithymia: From Neurobiological Basis to Clinical Implications Daniela Laricchiuta, Carlo Lai and Laura Petrosini
109
Chapter 6
Neural Bases of Emotion Regulation Dario Grossi and Luigi Trojano
127
Chapter 7
Emotion Modulation in Everyday Life and the Subjective Valence of Music in Mental Disorders Stefan Gebhardt, Markus Kunkel and Richard von Georgi
Chapter 8
Excessive Food Intake and Emotion Dysregulation Gaia de Campora and Luciano Giromini
Chapter 9
Childhood Overweight and Obesity: Extending the Knowledge through the Lens of the Emotion Regulation Paradigm Gaia de Campora, Dawn Lindshield and Luciano Giromini
Chapter 10
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vii
Technology Use in Promoting Effective Emotion-Regulation: Applications in Workplace, Parenting and for Children Oana A. David and Horea R. Oltean
143 157
169
179
vi Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Bridging Cognition and Emotion in Moral Decision Making: Role of Emotion Regulation Raluca D. Szekely and Andrei C. Miu
199
Regulation of the Terror of Death: Emotion Regulation Strategies and Social Consequences Nicholas Plusnin and Christopher A. Pepping
217
Chapter 13
Movement-based Strategies for Emotion Regulation Tal Shafir
Chapter 14
Emotion-Regulation in the Workplace: Processes, Affective and Task Related Effects Oana Alexandra David
251
Emotion-Regulation in Parents: Processes, Affective and Behavioral Effects Oana Alexandra David
257
Chapter 15
Index
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Contents
231
263
PREFACE Emotion regulation (ER), which refers to the ability to identify, experience, modulate, and express emotions, is critical to adaptive functioning. Although the term ER has been used synonymously with coping strategies, affect regulation, and self-regulation, it is important to differentiate ER from these other constructs to ensure optimal construct validity and accurate measurement. To this end, ER has been defined as ―the process by which individuals influence which emotions they have, when they