Psychological ability to respond to the ongoing demands of experience with the range of emotions in a manner that is socially tolerable and sufficiently flexible.
See more 1 Background: Contemporary theories and evidence implicate defective emotion regulation in violent behaviour.
2 Finally, several theoretical issues for incidental and intentional emotion regulation are discussed.
3 Introduction: Alexithymia and anhedonia both refer to a deficit in emotion regulation .
4 Students' baseline characteristics accounted for substantial degrees of change in emotion regulation .
5 Problems with emotion regulation are a common feature across perinatal mental illnesses.
6 However, almost no studies have examined how emotion regulation relates to emotional inertia.
7 Clinical relevance: Parent-child interactions are a key component of children's emotion regulation development.
8 Furthermore expressive suppression as a means of emotion regulation was related to alexithymia.
9 This approach can potentially lead to powerful therapeutic emotion regulation protocols for neuropsychiatric disorders.
10 This study also showed that control and clinical sample have different emotion regulation capacities.
11 Our results demonstrate that connectivity-based neurofeedback training of emotion regulation networks enhances emotion regulation capabilities.
12 Disorders of emotion regulation such as anxiety disorders and depression are common and yet debilitating.
13 Results show that prenatal maternal depression was associated with lower emotion regulation and greater distress.
14 Implications for emotion regulation and clinical interventions are discussed.
15 Eating can represent a reward, a response to boredom, or stress reduction and emotion regulation .
16 The authors suggest a broad framework for emotion regulation that includes both deliberative and incidental forms.
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