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A study on the negative emotion regulation strategies: Variations in regulation styles related to the kind of emotions and the personal characteristics

Korean Journal of Social and Personality Psychology / Korean Journal of Social and Personality Psychology, (P)1229-0653;
2000, v.14 no.2, pp.1-16
Kyung-Hwan Min (Department of Psychology, Seoul National University)
Ji-Hyun Kim (Department of Psychology, Seoul National University)
Seok-Bin Yoon (Department of Psychology, Seoul National University)
Seung-Min Jahng (Department of Psychology, Seoul National University)
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Abstract

The present study examined the use and effectiveness of various emotion regulation strategies. Study 1 supported our suggestion that emotion regulation strategies would be divided into three styles: active regulation style, avoidant/distractive regulation style, and support-seeking regulation style. These three styles were differently related to several personal characteristics, such as self-esteem, generalized expectancies for negative emotion regulation, introversion-extraversion, neuroticism, optimism, emotional support, and emotional expressivity. In study 2, we examined whether the use and effectiveness of each emotion regulation style depended on the kind of emotion experienced. The results showed that the use of the three emotion regulation styles had different patterns for anger, sadness, anxiety, and shame. In addition, we found that frequently used regulation styles were not necessarily effective ones.

keywords

Korean Journal of Social and Personality Psychology