Don't Get Too Excited: Assessing Individual Differences in the Down-Regulation of Positive Emotions
- PMID: 28678548
- DOI: 10.1080/00223891.2017.1339711
Don't Get Too Excited: Assessing Individual Differences in the Down-Regulation of Positive Emotions
Erratum in
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Don't Get Too Excited: Assessing Individual Differences in the Down-Regulation of Positive Emotions.J Pers Assess. 2019 Jan-Feb;101(1):116. doi: 10.1080/00223891.2018.1501247. Epub 2018 Sep 13. J Pers Assess. 2019. PMID: 30211656 No abstract available.
Abstract
A voluminous literature has documented the importance of emotion regulation for health and well-being. The studies in this literature, however, have generally focused on the down-regulation of negative affect. Few studies have examined the down-regulation of positive affect. In Study 1, we constructed a scale, the revised Regulatory Emotional Self-Efficacy Scale (r-RESE), which assesses both the down- and up-regulation of positive affect, in addition to the traditional down-regulation of negative affect. In Study 2, we conducted an extensive validation of the r-RESE scale, using a multimethod approach with informant ratings, to illustrate that the down-regulation of positive affect represents a process independent of each of the other forms of emotion regulation. In Study 3, we provided evidence that the ability to down-regulate positive emotions provides added predictive utility when predicting indexes of impulsivity and adjustment. Across the studies, we illustrate the potential importance of the down-regulation of positive emotions as a topic of study for the field of emotion regulation.
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