Mean Affect Moderates the Association between Affect Variability and Mental Health

IF 2.1 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY Affective science Pub Date : 2024-06-13 DOI:10.1007/s42761-024-00238-0
Brooke N. Jenkins, Lydia Q. Ong, Anthony D. Ong, Hee Youn (Helen) Lee, Julia K. Boehm
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Abstract

Increasing evidence suggests that within-person variation in affect is a dimension distinct from mean levels along which individuals can be characterized. This study investigated affect variability’s association with concurrent and longitudinal mental health and how mean affect levels moderate these associations. The mental health outcomes of depression, panic disorder, self-rated mental health, and mental health professional visits from the second and third waves of the Midlife in the United States Study were used for cross-sectional (n = 1,676) and longitudinal outcomes (n = 1,271), respectively. These participants took part in the National Study of Daily Experiences (NSDE II), where they self-reported their affect once a day for 8 days, and this was used to compute affect mean and variability. Greater positive affect variability cross-sectionally predicted a higher likelihood of depression, panic disorder, mental health professional use, and poorer self-rated mental health. Greater negative affect variability predicted higher panic disorder probability. Longitudinally, elevated positive and negative affect variability predicted higher depression likelihood and worse self-rated mental health over time, while greater positive affect variability also predicted increased panic disorder probability. Additionally, mean affect moderated associations between variability and health such that variability-mental health associations primarily took place when mean positive affect was high (for concurrent mental health professional use and longitudinal depression) and when mean negative affect was low (for concurrent depression, panic disorder, self-rated mental health, and longitudinal self-rated mental health). Taken together, affect variability may have implications for both short- and long-term health and mean levels should be considered.

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平均情感调节情感多变性与心理健康之间的关系
越来越多的证据表明,人与人之间的情感变化是有别于平均水平的一个维度,可以根据平均水平来描述个体。本研究调查了情感变异与并发和纵向心理健康的关系,以及平均情感水平如何缓和这些关系。美国中年研究 "第二波和第三波中的抑郁症、恐慌症、自评心理健康和心理健康专业就诊等心理健康结果分别用于横截面结果(n = 1,676 人)和纵向结果(n = 1,271 人)。这些参与者参加了全国日常经历研究(NSDE II),他们在8天内每天自我报告一次自己的情绪,并以此计算情绪的平均值和变异性。从横截面来看,积极情绪变异性越大,患抑郁症、恐慌症、使用心理健康专业人员的可能性就越大,自我评价的心理健康程度就越差。负面情绪变异性越大,预测恐慌症的概率越高。从纵向来看,随着时间的推移,积极情绪和消极情绪变异性的升高预示着抑郁可能性的升高和自我评定的心理健康状况的恶化,而积极情绪变异性的升高也预示着恐慌症概率的升高。此外,平均情感调节了变异性与健康之间的关联,因此变异性与心理健康之间的关联主要发生在平均积极情感较高时(对于同时使用心理健康专业人员和纵向抑郁而言),以及平均消极情感较低时(对于同时抑郁、恐慌症、自评心理健康和纵向自评心理健康而言)。综上所述,情绪的变化可能会对短期和长期健康产生影响,因此应考虑平均水平。
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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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