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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Main Authors: Chiara Verzeletti, Vanda Lucia Zammuner, Cristina Galli, Sergio Agnoli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2016-12-01
Series:Cogent Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2016.1199294
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spelling 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
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