Experiential Avoidance, Emotional Expression, and Psychopathology in Early and Late Adulthood

Experiential avoidance (EA) is an unwillingness to remain in contact with private and overt experiences, with higher EA associated with increased psychopathology. This study investigated relationships among EA, age, and the use of emotion words in positive and negative autobiographical narratives, a...

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Main Author: Robertson, Sarah Marie
Format: Others
Published: Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/101
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spelling ndltd-UTENN-oai-trace.tennessee.edu-utk_graddiss-11272011-12-13T16:00:23Z Experiential Avoidance, Emotional Expression, and Psychopathology in Early and Late Adulthood Robertson, Sarah Marie Experiential avoidance (EA) is an unwillingness to remain in contact with private and overt experiences, with higher EA associated with increased psychopathology. This study investigated relationships among EA, age, and the use of emotion words in positive and negative autobiographical narratives, as well as whether EA was associated with depression, anxiety, quality of life, and social support. Participants included younger (n=60) and older adults (n=60), who completed a positive and negative emotion narrative task along with measures of psychopathology. Results indicated that relative to younger adults, older adults spoke for longer time intervals in both narrative conditions. EA did not significantly affect narrative duration in either age cohort. However, despite longer narrative durations, older adults high in EA used fewer negative emotion words in the negative emotion narrative task compared to young adults high in EA. EA was positively associated with anxiety and depression and inversely related to quality of life and social support. Results are explained in the developmental context of the Socioemotional Selectivity Theory (Carstensen, 1991), which posits that young adults are more prone to communicate in situations that involve information attainment, whereas older adults verbal behaviors may be more a function of emotion regulation. Clinical implications are discussed. 2009-08-01 text application/pdf http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/101 Doctoral Dissertations Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Psychology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
spellingShingle Psychology
Robertson, Sarah Marie
Experiential Avoidance, Emotional Expression, and Psychopathology in Early and Late Adulthood
description Experiential avoidance (EA) is an unwillingness to remain in contact with private and overt experiences, with higher EA associated with increased psychopathology. This study investigated relationships among EA, age, and the use of emotion words in positive and negative autobiographical narratives, as well as whether EA was associated with depression, anxiety, quality of life, and social support. Participants included younger (n=60) and older adults (n=60), who completed a positive and negative emotion narrative task along with measures of psychopathology. Results indicated that relative to younger adults, older adults spoke for longer time intervals in both narrative conditions. EA did not significantly affect narrative duration in either age cohort. However, despite longer narrative durations, older adults high in EA used fewer negative emotion words in the negative emotion narrative task compared to young adults high in EA. EA was positively associated with anxiety and depression and inversely related to quality of life and social support. Results are explained in the developmental context of the Socioemotional Selectivity Theory (Carstensen, 1991), which posits that young adults are more prone to communicate in situations that involve information attainment, whereas older adults verbal behaviors may be more a function of emotion regulation. Clinical implications are discussed.
author Robertson, Sarah Marie
author_facet Robertson, Sarah Marie
author_sort Robertson, Sarah Marie
title Experiential Avoidance, Emotional Expression, and Psychopathology in Early and Late Adulthood
title_short Experiential Avoidance, Emotional Expression, and Psychopathology in Early and Late Adulthood
title_full Experiential Avoidance, Emotional Expression, and Psychopathology in Early and Late Adulthood
title_fullStr Experiential Avoidance, Emotional Expression, and Psychopathology in Early and Late Adulthood
title_full_unstemmed Experiential Avoidance, Emotional Expression, and Psychopathology in Early and Late Adulthood
title_sort experiential avoidance, emotional expression, and psychopathology in early and late adulthood
publisher Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange
publishDate 2009
url http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/101
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