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  1. Despite research finding that emotion regulation is commonly interpersonal (Zaki & Williams, 2013) and that the peer context is centrally important for adolescents (Hartup, 1993), no research to date had evaluated links between intrapersonal and interpersonal emotion regulation in this age group. Specifically, the current study contributed new data evidencing concurrent and longitudinal ...

    • Conceptual and Methodological Limitations and Controversies
    • The Role of Person-Situation Fit
    • Cultural and Sociodemographic Differences
    • Biopsychosocial Mechanisms of Coping and Emotion Regulation

    A complication in the literature reviewed here is the very definition of psychological well-being. As noted earlier, well-being is conceptualized and operationalized in several ways. These approaches most typically emphasize a diverse set of “positive” outcomes (e.g., personal growth), but also include the lack or amelioration of “negative” outcome...

    Foundational theories of coping (and to a lesser extent, emotion regulation) emphasize that the most adaptive strategies are those that meet the specific challenge posed by the appraised external situation (e.g., Lazarus & Folkman, 1984). A promising research focus in this area is integrating intrapersonal coping and emotion regulation with the soc...

    Evidence that both personality characteristics and emotion regulation vary cross-culturally (Matsumoto, Yoo, & Nakagawa, 2008) suggests that a broader social context should be taken into account. Culture can affect how and when people regulate emotions, as well as determine whether regulatory efforts are positively or negatively associated with wel...

    With improved technology and understanding of the biological correlates of psychological processes and health, researchers increasingly examine the biological correlates of coping and emotion regulation, including neural substrates, neuroendocrine responses to stress, and immune system functioning. Regarding neural substrates, one of the most consi...

    • Brett Marroquín, Howard Tennen, Annette L. Stanton
    • 2017
  2. An essential component of achieving, restoring, and sustaining psychological well-being is the ability to adapt to the challenges and obstacles of life. In this chapter, we review the literature on coping and emotion regulation as processes by which individuals respond to situational demands, and in particular, negative events. We first define coping and emotion regulation in their historical ...

  3. Mar 29, 2021 · According to Rimé, IER works as an interpersonal regulatory signal that people use as emotion regulation attempts in the aftermath of an emotional experience. From Rimé's work, several interactive interpersonal processes involved in emotional management, such as social coping, social support, altruisms, and prosocial behaviors have been ...

  4. Jan 19, 2024 · These predictions are based on prior work on both intrapersonal and interpersonal emotion regulation. Whereas in most cases, we theorize that IER strategies function similarly to their intrapersonal counterparts, certain strategies may play out differently in an interpersonal context (Christensen et al., 2020).

  5. Help me if you can: Evaluating the effectiveness of interpersonal compared to intrapersonal emotion regulation in reducing distress. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry , 55 , 33 – 40 . doi: 10.1016/j.jbtep.2016.11.008 Google Scholar

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  7. Apr 28, 2020 · Emotion Regulation (ER) is an umbrella term that covers both interpersonal and intrapersonal strategies aimed at modifying the duration, intensity and type of emotions that the individuals are experiencing. Although the connection between intrapersonal emotion regulation strategies and psychological distress is well documented, the evidence regarding the association between interpersonal ...

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