Journal ArticleDOI
The social consequences of expressive suppression.
Emily A. Butler,Boris Egloff,Frank H. Wilhelm,Nancy C. Smith,Elizabeth A. Erickson,James J. Gross +5 more
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TLDR
The authors' analysis suggests that expressive suppression should disrupt communication and increase stress levels during social interactions, and this hypothesis was tested in unacquainted pairs of women.Abstract:
At times, people keep their emotions from showing during social interactions. The authors' analysis suggests that such expressive suppression should disrupt communication and increase stress levels. To test this hypothesis, the authors conducted 2 studies in which unacquainted pairs of women discussed an upsetting topic. In Study 1, one member of each pair was randomly assigned to (a) suppress her emotional behavior, (b) respond naturally, or (c) cognitively reappraise in a way that reduced emotional responding. Suppression alone disrupted communication and magnified blood pressure responses in the suppressors' partners. In Study 2, suppression had a negative impact on the regulators' emotional experience and increased blood pressure in both regulators and their partners. Suppression also reduced rapport and inhibited relationship formation.read more
Citations
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A Content Analysis of Caregiver's Computer-Mediated Communication on Loneliness
TL;DR: Kaupe et al. as discussed by the authors conducted a content analysis on threads collected between August 2018 and January 2019 from AgingCare.com, a website dedicated to the needs of caregivers.
Journal ArticleDOI
Individual differences in emotion regulation and face recognition.
TL;DR: Associations between individual differences in a range of adaptive versus maladaptive emotion regulation strategies and face recognition are examined for the first time to provide new evidence concerning the important associations between emotion and cognition.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Effect of Organizational Member's Allocentrism-Idiocentrism on the emotion expression and favoritism
Youngsik Kim,Yongwon Suh +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a method to solve the problem of the lack of resources in the South Korean market by using the concept of a "bucket" for the purpose of improving the quality of the water supply.
Emotional competence and relationship satisfaction: identifying skills that may be essential to having a happy and intimate relationship
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relationship between measures of emotional competence and relationship satisfaction and found that the best predictors of close relationship satisfaction were ambivalence over the expression of intimacy emotions and difficulty identifying emotions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
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