Childhood: Developmental Psychology – Article overview (UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM)
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Emotions may facilitate adaptation by readying behavioural responses (1), enhancing memory for important events (2) and guide interpersonal interactions (3). However, emotions are maladaptive when they are of the wrong type (1), at the wrong time (2) or at the wrong intensity level (3). Emotions consist of three key features:
The behavioural changes as a result of emotions are associated with autonomic and neuroendocrine changes that anticipate the associated behavioural response with an emotion.
The modal model of emotion states that emotion arises four steps:
Emotions can change the environment which, in turn, alters the probability of experiencing a certain emotion.
Emotion regulation refers to how one attempts to influence the emotions one has, when one experiences them, how one experiences them and how one expresses these emotions. Intrinsic emotion regulation refers to regulating one’s own emotions. Extrinsic emotion regulation refers to regulating the emotions of somebody else (e.g. regulating the emotions of a child). Emotions can be down-regulated (i.e. lower intensity of emotions) but also up-regulated (i.e. greater intensity of emotions).
Emotion regulatory acts may have their primary impact at different points in the emotion generative process. Each of the parts of the modal model of emotion may be influenced by emotion regulation. There are five points at which individuals can regulate emotions:
Antecedent-focused emotion regulation refers to emotion regulation focused before appraisals give rise to emotional responses (e.g. control situation before you get mad). Response-focused emotion regulation refers to emotion regulation which occurs after the responses are generated (e.g. feel less mad).
Distraction refers to a shift in attention from either the emotional aspect of the situation or from the situation altogether. Rumination refers to a perseverative focus on thoughts and feelings associated with an emotion-eliciting event.
Reappraisal refers to changing a situation’s meaning in such a way that there is a change in the person’s emotional response to that situation. It typically leads to decreased negative emotion experience and expressive behaviour. It does not interfere with other ongoing cognitive processes as it occurs early in the emotion-generative process.
Expressive suppression refers to attempts to decrease ongoing emotion-expressive behaviour. Behavioural expressions of emotion may discharge emotion (i.e. hydraulic model). In this case, not allowing behaviour to discharge emotions will lead to a spillage of the effects of emotion somewhere else (e.g. heightened physiological response). However, behavioural expressions of emotion may also amplify the experience of the emotion. This means that suppressing the behavioural expression leads to a less intense experience. Suppression has cognitive and social costs (e.g. worse memory of the event; partners of suppressors report less comfort and ease with interaction partners).
People may differ in emotion regulation strategies because they differ in their emotion regulation goals. People may also differ in their beliefs regarding emotion and emotion regulation. This may shape emotion regulation strategies. Individuals with incremental beliefs make flexible, contextual interpretations of events. In case of challenge, they make assertive attempts at self-regulation which often leads to succesful behaviour. Individuals who hold entity beliefs view attributes as fixed and make fewer attempts at self-regulation. This leads to self-regulation failure. Emotion regulation may be unconscious and automatic or conscious and effortful.
There are three theories as to how depression disrupts emotional responding:
This bundle contains a summary of all the articles that are needed for the course "Childhood: Developmental Psychology" given at the University of Amsterdam. It includes the following articles:
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