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Feeling Better When Someone Is Alike: Poor Emotion Regulators Profit From Pro-Social Values and Priming for Similarities With Close Others.

Identifieur interne : 000050 ( PubMed/Corpus ); précédent : 000049; suivant : 000051

Feeling Better When Someone Is Alike: Poor Emotion Regulators Profit From Pro-Social Values and Priming for Similarities With Close Others.

Auteurs : Monischa B. Chatterjee ; Nicola Baumann ; Sander L. Koole

Source :

RBID : pubmed:27859249

Abstract

The dispositional inability to self-regulate one's own emotions intuitively is described as state orientation and has been associated with numerous psychological impairments. The necessity to search for buffering effects against negative outcomes of state orientation is evident. Research suggests that state-oriented individuals can benefit from feeling close to others. Yet, there are individual differences in the extent to which supportive relationships are valued. The objective of the present article was to examine whether high importance of relatedness increases the utilization of its situational activation among state-oriented individuals.

DOI: 10.1111/jopy.12292
PubMed: 27859249

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pubmed:27859249

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<nlm:affiliation>Federal Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (BAuA).</nlm:affiliation>
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<name sortKey="Baumann, Nicola" sort="Baumann, Nicola" uniqKey="Baumann N" first="Nicola" last="Baumann">Nicola Baumann</name>
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<nlm:affiliation>University of Trier.</nlm:affiliation>
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<name sortKey="Koole, Sander L" sort="Koole, Sander L" uniqKey="Koole S" first="Sander L" last="Koole">Sander L. Koole</name>
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<nlm:affiliation>Federal Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (BAuA).</nlm:affiliation>
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<name sortKey="Baumann, Nicola" sort="Baumann, Nicola" uniqKey="Baumann N" first="Nicola" last="Baumann">Nicola Baumann</name>
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<name sortKey="Koole, Sander L" sort="Koole, Sander L" uniqKey="Koole S" first="Sander L" last="Koole">Sander L. Koole</name>
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<title level="j">Journal of personality</title>
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<div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">The dispositional inability to self-regulate one's own emotions intuitively is described as state orientation and has been associated with numerous psychological impairments. The necessity to search for buffering effects against negative outcomes of state orientation is evident. Research suggests that state-oriented individuals can benefit from feeling close to others. Yet, there are individual differences in the extent to which supportive relationships are valued. The objective of the present article was to examine whether high importance of relatedness increases the utilization of its situational activation among state-oriented individuals.</div>
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<AbstractText Label="OBJECTIVE" NlmCategory="OBJECTIVE">The dispositional inability to self-regulate one's own emotions intuitively is described as state orientation and has been associated with numerous psychological impairments. The necessity to search for buffering effects against negative outcomes of state orientation is evident. Research suggests that state-oriented individuals can benefit from feeling close to others. Yet, there are individual differences in the extent to which supportive relationships are valued. The objective of the present article was to examine whether high importance of relatedness increases the utilization of its situational activation among state-oriented individuals.</AbstractText>
<AbstractText Label="METHOD" NlmCategory="METHODS">In two studies, we examined whether situational activation of relatedness (by priming for similarities with a close other) is particularly advantageous for state-oriented individuals who attach high importance to relatedness (i.e., benevolence values). The sample consisted of 170 psychology undergraduates in Study 1 and 177 in Study 2.</AbstractText>
<AbstractText Label="RESULTS" NlmCategory="RESULTS">In both studies, state-oriented participants high in benevolence had reduced negative mood after thinking about similarities (vs. differences). State-oriented participants low in benevolence did not benefit from priming for similarities. In Study 2, physical presence of a close other did not boost priming effects for state-oriented participants but stimulated action-oriented participants to attune their self-regulatory efforts to the context.</AbstractText>
<AbstractText Label="CONCLUSIONS" NlmCategory="CONCLUSIONS">The results show that state-oriented individuals who value benevolence do benefit from a situational activation of relatedness.</AbstractText>
<CopyrightInformation>© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.</CopyrightInformation>
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<Keyword MajorTopicYN="N">State versus action orientation</Keyword>
<Keyword MajorTopicYN="N">benevolence</Keyword>
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