Emotion regulation strategies and psychosocial well-being in adolescence
To study whether and how emotion regulation (EmR) strategies are associated with adolescents’ well-being, 633 Italian adolescents completed a survey that measured, using the emotion regulation questionnaire (ERQ), the strategies of cognitive reappraisal (CR) and expressive suppression (ES), and thei...
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Online Access: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2016.1199294 |
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doaj-3b12e5eda583439a96c8a396639b3a6c2021-03-18T16:21:44ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Psychology2331-19082016-12-013110.1080/23311908.2016.11992941199294Emotion regulation strategies and psychosocial well-being in adolescenceChiara Verzeletti0Vanda Lucia Zammuner1Cristina Galli2Sergio Agnoli3University of PadovaUniversity of PadovaUniversity of PadovaUniversity of PadovaTo study whether and how emotion regulation (EmR) strategies are associated with adolescents’ well-being, 633 Italian adolescents completed a survey that measured, using the emotion regulation questionnaire (ERQ), the strategies of cognitive reappraisal (CR) and expressive suppression (ES), and their relationship with several well-being measures. Factor analysis and reliability results confirmed the validity of ERQ to assess adolescents’ regulation strategies. Correlation and regression results showed that a greater reliance on CR was positively associated with better well-being outcomes for most indicators, especially life satisfaction, social support perception, and positive affect; greater preference for ES conversely was associated with lower well-being level for all indicators, including psychological health, emotional loneliness, and negative affect. Neither gender nor age differences were observed for CR and ES; CR and ES were positively correlated with each other. Both analysis of variance and regression results showed gender to be a significant factor for well-being indicators (e.g. males’ higher positive affect and life satisfaction than females’), whereas age was associated with differences in psychological health only, with 16-year olds reporting the lowest health, and 14-year olds the highest. The findings overall show that adolescents’ well-being is related to preferred EmR strategies, mirroring associations found in the adult population. The study results also suggest the need to further explore this relationship in adolescence.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2016.1199294emotion regulationreappraisalsuppressionadolescencewell-beinghealthaffectlonelinesslife satisfaction |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Chiara Verzeletti Vanda Lucia Zammuner Cristina Galli Sergio Agnoli |
spellingShingle |
Chiara Verzeletti Vanda Lucia Zammuner Cristina Galli Sergio Agnoli Emotion regulation strategies and psychosocial well-being in adolescence Cogent Psychology emotion regulation reappraisal suppression adolescence well-being health affect loneliness life satisfaction |
author_facet |
Chiara Verzeletti Vanda Lucia Zammuner Cristina Galli Sergio Agnoli |
author_sort |
Chiara Verzeletti |
title |
Emotion regulation strategies and psychosocial well-being in adolescence |
title_short |
Emotion regulation strategies and psychosocial well-being in adolescence |
title_full |
Emotion regulation strategies and psychosocial well-being in adolescence |
title_fullStr |
Emotion regulation strategies and psychosocial well-being in adolescence |
title_full_unstemmed |
Emotion regulation strategies and psychosocial well-being in adolescence |
title_sort |
emotion regulation strategies and psychosocial well-being in adolescence |
publisher |
Taylor & Francis Group |
series |
Cogent Psychology |
issn |
2331-1908 |
publishDate |
2016-12-01 |
description |
To study whether and how emotion regulation (EmR) strategies are associated with adolescents’ well-being, 633 Italian adolescents completed a survey that measured, using the emotion regulation questionnaire (ERQ), the strategies of cognitive reappraisal (CR) and expressive suppression (ES), and their relationship with several well-being measures. Factor analysis and reliability results confirmed the validity of ERQ to assess adolescents’ regulation strategies. Correlation and regression results showed that a greater reliance on CR was positively associated with better well-being outcomes for most indicators, especially life satisfaction, social support perception, and positive affect; greater preference for ES conversely was associated with lower well-being level for all indicators, including psychological health, emotional loneliness, and negative affect. Neither gender nor age differences were observed for CR and ES; CR and ES were positively correlated with each other. Both analysis of variance and regression results showed gender to be a significant factor for well-being indicators (e.g. males’ higher positive affect and life satisfaction than females’), whereas age was associated with differences in psychological health only, with 16-year olds reporting the lowest health, and 14-year olds the highest. The findings overall show that adolescents’ well-being is related to preferred EmR strategies, mirroring associations found in the adult population. The study results also suggest the need to further explore this relationship in adolescence. |
topic |
emotion regulation reappraisal suppression adolescence well-being health affect loneliness life satisfaction |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2016.1199294 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT chiaraverzeletti emotionregulationstrategiesandpsychosocialwellbeinginadolescence AT vandaluciazammuner emotionregulationstrategiesandpsychosocialwellbeinginadolescence AT cristinagalli emotionregulationstrategiesandpsychosocialwellbeinginadolescence AT sergioagnoli emotionregulationstrategiesandpsychosocialwellbeinginadolescence |
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1724215346643075072 |