Beliefs About Emotion: Links to Emotion Regulation, Well-Being, and Psychological Distress

People differ in their implicit beliefs about emotions. Some believe emotions are fixed (entity theorists), whereas others believe that everyone can learn to change their emotions (incremental theorists). We extend the prior literature by demonstrating (a) entity beliefs are associated with lower we...

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Veröffentlicht in:Basic and applied social psychology 2013-11, Vol.35 (6), p.497-505
Hauptverfasser: De Castella, Krista, Goldin, Philippe, Jazaieri, Hooria, Ziv, Michal, Dweck, Carol S., Gross, James J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:People differ in their implicit beliefs about emotions. Some believe emotions are fixed (entity theorists), whereas others believe that everyone can learn to change their emotions (incremental theorists). We extend the prior literature by demonstrating (a) entity beliefs are associated with lower well-being and increased psychological distress, (b) people's beliefs about their own emotions explain greater unique variance than their beliefs about emotions in general, and (3) implicit beliefs are linked with well-being/distress via cognitive reappraisal. These results suggest people's implicit beliefs-particularly about their own emotions-may predispose them toward emotion regulation strategies that have important consequences for psychological health.
ISSN:0197-3533
1532-4834
DOI:10.1080/01973533.2013.840632