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    • Emotion regulation

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      • Emotion regulation (ER) refers to attempts to influence emotions in ourselves or others.
      psycnet.apa.org/fulltext/2020-03346-001.html
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  2. Emotion regulation (ER) refers to attempts to influence emotions in ourselves or others. Over the past several decades, ER has become a popular topic across many subdisciplines within psychology.

  3. Emotion regulation (ER) is defined both as strategic and automatic processes that influence the occurrence, magnitude, duration and expression of an emotional response (Gross & Thompson, 2007). Despite its widespread use in the clinical psychology literature, defining emotion regulation and differentiating it from emotional reactivity is ...

  4. Emotion regulation (ER) refers to attempts to influence emotions in ourselves or others. Over the past several decades, ER has become a popular topic across many subdisciplines within psychology.

  5. Emotion regulation (ER) refers to attempts to influence emotions in ourselves or others. Over the past several decades, ER has become a popular topic across many subdisciplines within psychology.

  6. Dec 6, 2019 · Definition. Emotion regulation (ER) refers to processes by which individuals influence occurrence, kind, and spontaneous course of emotions, as well as experiential, behavioral, and/or physiological responses in an automatic or controlled, conscious or unconscious, and effortful or effortless manner (Gross 1998, 1999, 2014; Gross and Thompson ...

    • dorothea.koenig@univie.ac.at
  7. Jun 1, 2015 · Emotion regulation (ER) underlies psychopathology and clinically relevant behaviors. • Treatments that do not directly target ER have positive effects on aspects of ER. • Treatments developed specifically to target ER may have transdiagnostic utility. • ER may be one mechanism of change underlying numerous efficacious treatments.

  8. The process model of emotion regulation. The process model (PM) ( Gross, 1998) helped to delineate emotion regulation (ER) research by highlighting the way different ER strategies may affect people’s emotional responses. The original process model has been successively revised and extended.

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