Fluctuations in emotion regulation as a mechanism linking stress and internalizing psychopathology among adolescents: An intensive longitudinal study

Stressful life events (SLEs) are tightly coupled with the emergence of anxiety and depression symptoms among adolescents, but the mechanisms underlying this relationship remain poorly understood. We investigated within-person fluctuations in emotion regulation as a mechanism linking SLEs and interna...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behaviour research and therapy 2024-07, Vol.178, p.104551, Article 104551
Hauptverfasser: Ohashi, Yuri-Grace B., Rodman, Alexandra M., McLaughlin, Katie A.
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Rodman, Alexandra M.
McLaughlin, Katie A.
description Stressful life events (SLEs) are tightly coupled with the emergence of anxiety and depression symptoms among adolescents, but the mechanisms underlying this relationship remain poorly understood. We investigated within-person fluctuations in emotion regulation as a mechanism linking SLEs and internalizing psychopathology in an intensive longitudinal study. We examined how monthly fluctuations in SLEs were related to engagement in three emotion regulation strategies—acceptance, reappraisal, and rumination—and whether these strategies were associated with changes in internalizing symptoms in adolescents followed for one year (N = 30; n = 355 monthly observations). Bayesian hierarchical models revealed that on months when adolescents experienced more SLEs than was typical for them, they also engaged in more rumination, which, in turn, was associated with higher anxiety and depression symptoms and mediated the prospective relationship between SLEs and internalizing symptoms. In contrast, greater use of acceptance and reappraisal selectively moderated the association between stressors and internalizing symptoms, resulting in stronger links between SLEs and symptoms. These results suggest that emotion regulation strategies play different roles in the stress-psychopathology relationship. Understanding how changes in emotion regulation contribute to increases in internalizing symptoms following experiences of stress may provide novel targets for interventions aimed at reducing stress-related psychopathology. •Heightened internalizing symptoms follow exposure to more stress for an individual.•Rumination links stress with anxiety and depression at the within-person level.•Adolescents have increased anxiety following more reported engagement in acceptance.•More reappraisal results in higher depression symptoms in the following month.
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subjects Adolescence
Adolescent
Anxiety
Anxiety - psychology
Bayes Theorem
Child
Depression
Depression - psychology
Emotion regulation
Emotional Regulation
Female
Humans
Life Change Events
Longitudinal
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Rumination, Cognitive - physiology
Stress
Stress, Psychological - psychology
title Fluctuations in emotion regulation as a mechanism linking stress and internalizing psychopathology among adolescents: An intensive longitudinal study
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