4.3 Article

The Moderating Role of Emotion Regulation in the Recall of Negative Autobiographical Memories

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18137122

Keywords

emotion regulation; rumination; cognitive reappraisal; ecological momentary assessment; autobiographical memory

Funding

  1. Marie Curie EF-ST AffecTech Project [722022]
  2. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad, Spain [PSI2014-54172-R]
  3. CIBER of Physiopathology of Obesity and Nutrition CIBERobn, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Spain [CB06/03]

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Cognitive reappraisal was found to be associated with better memory performances, while intense rumination was linked with higher emotional involvement with negative events over time. Cognitive reappraisal has adaptive influence on autobiographical memory, whereas rumination plays a maladaptive role.
When facing a negative event, people implement different strategies to regulate ongoing emotions. Although the previous literature has suggested that the emotional intensity of a negative episode is associated with the characteristics of the subsequent autobiographical memory, it is still unknown whether emotion regulation (ER) moderates this relationship. In the present study, we provided undergraduate students with a smartphone-based diary to report a negative episode immediately after its occurrence and rate the momentary use of two ER strategies: cognitive reappraisal and rumination. To explore autobiographical memory, two surprise recall tasks were performed one week and one month after the event. According to the results, cognitive reappraisal was linked with better memory performances, and a tendency to retrospectively underestimate the negativity of highly intense events was observed only in participants adopting high rates of this strategy. Conversely, intense rumination was found to be associated with less detailed memories of emotionally intense events, as well as with higher emotional involvement with negative episodes over time, regardless of their intensity. Together, our results support the maladaptive role of rumination and the adaptive influence of cognitive reappraisal on autobiographical memory.

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