Anxiety, not regulation tendency, predicts how individuals regulate in the laboratory: An exploratory comparison of self-report and psychophysiology

dc.contributor.author

Burr, Daisy A

dc.contributor.author

Pizzie, Rachel G

dc.contributor.author

Kraemer, David JM

dc.date.accessioned

2021-04-01T14:16:21Z

dc.date.available

2021-04-01T14:16:21Z

dc.date.updated

2021-04-01T14:16:20Z

dc.description.abstract

<jats:p>Anxiety influences how individuals experience and regulate emotions in a variety of ways. For example, individuals with lower anxiety tend to cognitively reframe (reappraise) negative emotion and those with higher anxiety tend to suppress negative emotion. Research has also investigated these individual differences with psychophysiology. These lines of research assume coherence between how individuals regulate outside the laboratory, typically measured with self-report, and how they regulate during an experiment. Indeed, performance during experiments is interpreted as an indication of future behavior outside the laboratory, yet this relationship is seldom directly explored. To address this gap, we computed psychophysiological profiles of uninstructed (natural) regulation in the laboratory and explored the coherence between these profiles and a) self-reported anxiety and b) self-reported regulation tendency. Participants viewed negative images and were instructed to reappraise, suppress or naturally engage. Electrodermal and facial electromyography signals were recorded to compute a multivariate psychophysiological profile of regulation. Participants with lower anxiety exhibited similar profiles when naturally regulating and following instructions to reappraise, suggesting they naturally reappraised more. Participants with higher anxiety exhibited similar profiles when naturally regulating and following instructions to suppress, suggesting they naturally suppressed more. However, there was no association between self-reported reappraisal or suppression tendency and psychophysiology. These exploratory results indicate that anxiety, but not regulation tendency, predicts how individuals regulate emotion in the laboratory. These findings suggest that how individuals report regulating in the real world does not map on to how they regulate in the laboratory. Taken together, this underscores the importance of developing emotion-regulation interventions and paradigms that more closely align to and predict real-world outcomes.</jats:p>

dc.identifier.issn

1932-6203

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22485

dc.language

en

dc.publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

dc.relation.ispartof

PLOS ONE

dc.relation.isversionof

10.1371/journal.pone.0247246

dc.title

Anxiety, not regulation tendency, predicts how individuals regulate in the laboratory: An exploratory comparison of self-report and psychophysiology

dc.type

Journal article

pubs.begin-page

e0247246

pubs.end-page

e0247246

pubs.issue

3

pubs.organisational-group

Student

pubs.organisational-group

Psychology and Neuroscience

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

pubs.organisational-group

Trinity College of Arts & Sciences

pubs.publication-status

Published online

pubs.volume

16

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
journal.pone.0247246.pdf
Size:
1.67 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Description:
Published version