2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1751-9004.2007.00005.x
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Automatic Emotion Regulation

Abstract: How do people effectively regulate their emotional reactions? Why are some people better at this than others? Most prior research has addressed these questions by focusing on deliberate forms of emotion regulation. We argue that this focus has left out an important aspect of emotion regulation, namely, automatic emotion regulation (AER). Our review of the behavioral literature suggests that AER is pervasive in everyday life, and has far-reaching consequences for individuals' emotions. However, the behavioral l… Show more

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Cited by 412 publications
(349 citation statements)
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References 116 publications
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“…Therefore after some time these thoughts (or the affiliated negative mood) will cause the signaling of cognitive conflict. In line with emerging literature on emotion regulation, this signaling of conflict can occur at the automatic as well as at the strategic level (see Mauss, Bunge, & Gross, 2007). In most individuals this conflict signaling is followed by the disengagement of attention from negative thoughts.…”
Section: Impaired Disengagement Hypothesismentioning
confidence: 65%
“…Therefore after some time these thoughts (or the affiliated negative mood) will cause the signaling of cognitive conflict. In line with emerging literature on emotion regulation, this signaling of conflict can occur at the automatic as well as at the strategic level (see Mauss, Bunge, & Gross, 2007). In most individuals this conflict signaling is followed by the disengagement of attention from negative thoughts.…”
Section: Impaired Disengagement Hypothesismentioning
confidence: 65%
“…Both regions have been reported to be sensitive to rule complexity (Crone et al, 2006) and are thus more active when assessing stimuli that elicit different responses depending on a rule appropriate to the current context (bivalent stimuli) than when they assess stimuli associated with invariant responses (univalent stimuli). The application of such rules to regulate both behaviour and emotions may range from entirely automatic to explicitly willed (Mauss et al, 2007).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many different cognitive strategies can be used to regulate emotion, including reappraisal, selective attention, and suppression (see Gross, 1998 for a review). Although some forms may be automatically recruited (see Mauss et al, 2007 for a review), cognitive regulation techniques often require the active engagement of the participants in an effort to alter the emotional response through changing the appraisal of the significance of events or engagement with the event. Cognitive regulation strategies can be taught and practiced, as in cognitive therapy.…”
Section: Cognitive Regulation Strategiesmentioning
confidence: 99%