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  1. Social anxiety and emotion regulation flexibility: a daily diary approach.Germaine Y. Q. Tng & Hwajin Yang - 2024 - Cognition and Emotion 38 (2):199-216.
    Previous research suggests that social anxiety symptoms are maintained and intensified by inflexible emotion regulation (ER). Therefore, we examined whether trait-level social anxiety moderates ER flexibility operationalised at both between-person (covariation between variability in emotional intensity and variability in strategy use across occasions) and within-person (associations between emotional intensity and strategy use on a given day) levels. In a sample of healthy college-aged adults (N = 185, Mage = 21.89), we examined overall and emotion-specific intensities (shame, guilt, anxiety, anger, sadness) (...)
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  • Goals and Self-Efficacy Beliefs During the Initial COVID-19 Lockdown: A Mixed Methods Analysis.Laura Ritchie, Daniel Cervone & Benjamin T. Sharpe - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    This study aimed to capture how the coronavirus disease 2019 crisis disrupted and affected individuals’ goal pursuits and self-efficacy beliefs early during the lockdown phase of COVID-19. Participants impacted by lockdown regulations accessed an online questionnaire during a 10-day window from the end of March to early April 2020 and reported a significant personal goal toward which they had been working, and then completed quantitative and qualitative survey items tapping self-efficacy beliefs for goal achievement, subjective caring about the goal during (...)
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  • Identifying the determinants of emotion regulation choice: a systematic review with meta-analysis.Meghann Matthews, Thomas L. Webb, Roni Shafir, Miranda Snow & Gal Sheppes - 2021 - Cognition and Emotion 35 (6):1056-1084.
    Day-to-day life is inundated with attempts to control emotions and a wealth of research has examined what strategies people use and how effective these strategies are. However, until more recently, research has often neglected more basic questions such as whether and how people choose to regulate their emotions (i.e. emotion regulation choice). In an effort to identify what we know and what we need to know, we systematically reviewed studies that examined potential determinants of whether and how people choose to (...)
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