2020
Emotion Malleability Beliefs and Coping With the College Transition
Kneeland E, Dovidio J. Emotion Malleability Beliefs and Coping With the College Transition. Emotion 2020, 20: 452-461. PMID: 30702309, DOI: 10.1037/emo0000559.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsEmotion malleability beliefsMalleability beliefsEmotion regulationCognitive reappraisalEmotion regulation strategiesStudents’ beliefsFirst-year students' beliefsMental health adjustmentFirst-year college studentsSelf-report questionnairesMalleable viewRegulation strategiesStressful transitionHealth adjustmentCollege transitionLess depressionCollege studentsMental healthFall semesterEmotionsRuminationBeliefsFirst-year studentsCurrent studyLess use
2016
Beliefs about emotion’s malleability influence state emotion regulation
Kneeland E, Nolen-Hoeksema S, Dovidio J, Gruber J. Beliefs about emotion’s malleability influence state emotion regulation. Motivation And Emotion 2016, 40: 740-749. DOI: 10.1007/s11031-016-9566-6.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchDifferent emotion regulation strategiesEmotion regulation strategiesEmotion regulationEmotion conditionRegulation strategiesEmotion malleability beliefsEmotion regulatory behaviorsNegative emotion inductionState emotion regulationEmotion beliefsMalleability beliefsRecall taskEmotion inductionAffective scienceMalleable influenceMental healthRegulatory behaviorEmotionsCurrent studyBeliefsParticipantsLess effortMalleableTaskIndividualsEmotion Malleability Beliefs Influence the Spontaneous Regulation of Social Anxiety
Kneeland E, Nolen-Hoeksema S, Dovidio J, Gruber J. Emotion Malleability Beliefs Influence the Spontaneous Regulation of Social Anxiety. Cognitive Therapy And Research 2016, 40: 496-509. DOI: 10.1007/s10608-016-9765-1.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCognitive reappraisalEmotion conditionSpeech taskEmotion malleability beliefsEmotion regulatory behaviorsEmotion-generative processStressful speech taskStressful social situationsExpressive suppressionMalleability beliefsSocial anxietyNegative affectElicit anxietyRegulation strategiesSocial situationsIndividual beliefsEmotionsSpontaneous regulationRegulatory behaviorAnxietyExperimental manipulationMalleabilityMalleable conditionsReappraisalBeliefs
2009
An implicit measure of anti-gay attitudes: Prospective associations with emotion regulation strategies and psychological distress
Hatzenbuehler M, Dovidio J, Nolen-Hoeksema S, Phills C. An implicit measure of anti-gay attitudes: Prospective associations with emotion regulation strategies and psychological distress. Journal Of Experimental Social Psychology 2009, 45: 1316-1320. PMID: 20161465, PMCID: PMC2791410, DOI: 10.1016/j.jesp.2009.08.005.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchEmotion regulation strategiesExplicit attitude measuresPsychological distressAnti-gay attitudesRegulation strategiesAttitude measuresPoor emotion regulationStigma-related stressorsGreater psychological distressMore psychological distressProspective associationsMental health problemsEmotion dysregulationEmotion regulationImplicit measuresMore ruminationSubsequent distressSignificant mediatorStigmatized groupsPrejudicial attitudesDistressLGB respondentsRuminationRecent researchAttitudes