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Journal Article

Citation

Marroquín B, de Rutte J, May CL, Wisco BE. J. Soc. Clin. Psychol. 2019; 38(7): 605-626.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Guilford Publications)

DOI

10.1521/jscp.2019.38.7.605

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Emotion regulation in healthy functioning and in depression is typically examined as an intrapersonal phenomenon, but growing evidence suggests social factors affect individuals' strategy use and effectiveness. We examined whether the role of emotion regulation in depression--concurrently and over four weeks--depends on social connectedness, predicting that higher social connectedness would dilute effects of one's own strategy use regardless of specific strategy.

METHODS: Young adult participants (n = 187) completed measures of perceived social connectedness, depressive symptoms, two avoidant emotion regulation strategies (ruminative brooding and experiential avoidance), and two approach-oriented strategies (positive reappraisal and planning), and depressive symptoms again four weeks later (n = 166).

RESULTS: Cross-sectional associations of emotion regulation with symptoms were moderated by social connectedness: effects of both avoidant and approach strategies were weaker among more connected individuals. Prospectively, social connectedness moderated effects of approach strategies, but not avoidant strategies. Among more socially connected individuals, using approach strategies--which are typically adaptive--was associated with higher symptoms over time.

DISCUSSION: Results partially replicate previous research and support the role of social factors as important contexts of intraper-sonal emotion regulation and dysregulation in depression.

FINDINGS suggest that social resources can dilute intrapersonal effects regardless of strategy type--more in the shorter term than in the longer term--and can even lead seemingly adaptive strategies to backfire over time. Implications for research integrating emotion regulation, relationships, and depressive psychopathology are discussed.


Language: en

Keywords

depression; emotion regulation; interpersonal emotion regulation; relationships; social connectedness

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