Emotion regulation in everyday life : Mapping global self-reports to daily processes

Journal article


Koval, Peter, Kalokerinos, Elise K., Greenaway, Katharine H., Medland, Hayley, Kuppens, Peter, Nezlek, John B., Hinton, Jordan D. X. and Gross, James J.. (2023). Emotion regulation in everyday life : Mapping global self-reports to daily processes. Emotion. 23(2), pp. 357-374. https://doi.org/10.1037/emo0001097
AuthorsKoval, Peter, Kalokerinos, Elise K., Greenaway, Katharine H., Medland, Hayley, Kuppens, Peter, Nezlek, John B., Hinton, Jordan D. X. and Gross, James J.
Abstract

Recent theory conceptualizes emotion regulation as occurring across three stages: (a) identifying the need to regulate, (b) selecting a strategy, and (c) implementing that strategy to modify emotions. Yet, measurement of emotion regulation has not kept pace with these theoretical advances. In particular, widely used global self-report questionnaires are often assumed to index people's typical strategy selection tendencies. However, it is unclear how well global self-reports capture individual differences in strategy selection and/or whether they may also index other emotion regulation stages. To address this issue, we examined how global self-report measures correspond with the three stages of emotion regulation as modeled using daily life data. We analyzed data from nine daily diary and experience sampling studies (total N = 1,097), in which participants provided daily and global self-reports of cognitive reappraisal, expressive suppression, and rumination. We found only weak-to-moderate correlations between global self-reports and average daily self-reports of each regulation strategy (indexing strategy selection). Global self-reports also correlated with individual differences in the degree to which (a) preceding affect experience predicted regulation strategies (representing the identification stage), and (b) regulation strategies predicted subsequent changes in affective experience (representing the implementation stage). Our findings suggest that global self-report measures of reappraisal, suppression, and rumination may not strongly and uniquely correlate with individual differences in daily selection of these strategies. Moreover, global self-report measures may also index individual differences in the perceived need to regulate, and the affective consequences of regulation in daily life.

Keywordsemotion regulation; individual differences; extended process model; daily life; trait-state
Year2023
JournalEmotion
Journal citation23 (2), pp. 357-374
PublisherAmerican Psychological Association
ISSN1528-3542
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1037/emo0001097
PubMed ID35588386
Scopus EID2-s2.0-85131763913
Open accessPublished as green open access
Page range357-374
FunderAustralian Research Council (ARC)
European Research Council (ERC)
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (KU Leuven)
Author's accepted manuscript
License
All rights reserved
File Access Level
Open
Publisher's version
License
All rights reserved
File Access Level
Controlled
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Online18 May 2022
Publication process dates
Accepted22 Jan 2022
ARC Funded ResearchThis output has been funded, wholly or partially, under the Australian Research Council Act 2001
Grant IDDP160102252
DE190100203
DE180100352
FT190100300
704298
C14/19/054
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