The Wisdom to Know the Difference: Strategy-Situation Fit in Emotion Regulation in Daily Life Is Associated With Well-Being

The ability to regulate emotions is central to well-being, but healthy emotion regulation may not merely be about using the "right" strategies. According to the strategy-situation-fit hypothesis, emotion-regulation strategies are conducive to well-being only when used in appropriate contex...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological science 2016-12, Vol.27 (12), p.1651-1659
Hauptverfasser: Haines, Simon J., Gleeson, John, Kuppens, Peter, Hollenstein, Tom, Ciarrochi, Joseph, Labuschagne, Izelle, Grace, Caitlin, Koval, Peter
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container_end_page 1659
container_issue 12
container_start_page 1651
container_title Psychological science
container_volume 27
creator Haines, Simon J.
Gleeson, John
Kuppens, Peter
Hollenstein, Tom
Ciarrochi, Joseph
Labuschagne, Izelle
Grace, Caitlin
Koval, Peter
description The ability to regulate emotions is central to well-being, but healthy emotion regulation may not merely be about using the "right" strategies. According to the strategy-situation-fit hypothesis, emotion-regulation strategies are conducive to well-being only when used in appropriate contexts. This study is the first to test the strategy-situation-fit hypothesis using ecological momentary assessment of cognitive reappraisal—a putatively adaptive strategy. We expected people who used reappraisal more in uncontrollable situations and less in controllable situations to have greater well-being than people with the opposite pattern of reappraisal use. Healthy participants (n = 74) completed measures of wellbeing in the lab and used a smartphone app to report their use of reappraisal and perceived controllability of their environment 10 times a day for 1 week. Results supported the strategy-situation-fit hypothesis. Participants with relatively high well-being used reappraisal more in situations they perceived as lower in controllability and less in situations they perceived as higher in controllability. In contrast, we found little evidence for an association between greater well-being and greater mean use of reappraisal across situations.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0956797616669086
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subjects Cognition & reasoning
Cognitive appraisal
Ecological momentary assessment
Emotional regulation
Emotions
Hypotheses
Hypothesis testing
Quality of life
Research Report
Self control
Well being
Wisdom
title The Wisdom to Know the Difference: Strategy-Situation Fit in Emotion Regulation in Daily Life Is Associated With Well-Being
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