Habitual Expressive Suppression of Positive, but not Negative, Emotions Consistently Predicts Lower Well-being across Two Culturally Distinct Regions

IF 2.1 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY Affective science Pub Date : 2023-09-21 DOI:10.1007/s42761-023-00221-1
Chen-Wei Felix Yu, Claudia M. Haase, Jen-Ho Chang
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Abstract

Habitual expressive suppression (i.e., a tendency to inhibit the outward display of one's emotions; hereafter suppression) is often conceptualized as a maladaptive emotion regulation strategy. Yet, is this equally true for suppression of positive and of negative emotions? Across three studies and seven samples (total N > 1300 people) collected in two culturally distinct regions (i.e., Taiwan and the US), we examined the separability and distinct well-being effects of suppressing positive vs. negative emotions. Results consistently showed that (a) people suppressed their positive (vs. negative) emotions less, (b) the construct of suppression of positive (vs. negative) emotions was conceptually farther away from that of suppression of emotions in general, (c) suppression of positive and of negative emotions were only moderately correlated, and (d) only suppression of positive, but not negative, emotions, predicted lower well-being. An internal meta-analysis (k = 52 effect sizes) showed that these associations were robust to the inclusion of age, gender, and region as covariates. Future research may further probe the respective links between suppression of positive and of negative emotions and well-being across more cultural regions and across the life-span.

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对积极情绪(而非消极情绪)的习惯性表达性抑制能一致预测两个文化差异区域的较低幸福指数
习惯性表达压抑(即抑制自己情绪外露的倾向,以下简称压抑)通常被视为一种适应不良的情绪调节策略。然而,对积极情绪和消极情绪的抑制是否同样如此呢?我们通过在两个不同文化背景的地区(即台湾和美国)收集的三项研究和七个样本(总人数为 1300 人),考察了压抑积极情绪与压抑消极情绪的可分离性和不同的幸福感效应。结果一致表明:(a) 人们压抑积极(与消极)情绪的程度较低;(b) 压抑积极(与消极)情绪的概念与压抑一般情绪的概念相去甚远;(c) 压抑积极情绪与压抑消极情绪仅有适度的相关性;(d) 只有压抑积极情绪(而非消极情绪)才能预测较低的幸福感。一项内部荟萃分析(k = 52 个效应大小)显示,将年龄、性别和地区作为协变量时,这些关联是稳健的。未来的研究可能会在更多的文化区域和整个生命周期中进一步探究抑制积极情绪和消极情绪与幸福感之间各自的联系。
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Introduction to the Special Section Commentaries Affectivism and the Emotional Elephant: How a Componential Approach Can Reconcile Opposing Theories to Serve the Future of Affective Sciences A Developmental Psychobiologist’s Commentary on the Future of Affective Science Emotional Overshadowing: Pleasant and Unpleasant Cues Overshadow Neutral Cues in Human Associative Learning Emphasizing the Social in Social Emotion Regulation: A Call for Integration and Expansion
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