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  1. Emotion malleability beliefs matter in emotion regulation: a comprehensive review and meta-analysis.Yunsu Kim, Sooyeon Kim & Sunkyung Yoon - 2024 - Cognition and Emotion 38 (6):841-856.
    Individuals’ beliefs about the malleability of emotions have been theorised to play a role in their psychological distress by influencing emotion regulation processes, such as the use of emotion regulation strategies. We conducted a meta-analysis to test this idea across studies with a focus on the relationships between emotion malleability beliefs and five distinct emotion regulation strategies: cognitive reappraisal, suppression, avoidance, rumination, and acceptance. Further, using two-stage meta-analytic structural equation modelling (TSSEM), we examined whether the emotion regulation strategies mediate the (...)
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  • Emotion malleability beliefs prompt cognitive reappraisal: evidence from an online longitudinal intervention for adolescents.Siwen Guo, Jie Yang, Ottmar V. Lipp & Jing Zhang - forthcoming - Cognition and Emotion.
    Emotion malleability beliefs (EMB) have been shown to be a potential predictor of cognitive reappraisal use. However, the nature of the relationship between EMB and cognitive reappraisal use remains unclear. The present study manipulated EMB with an online intervention and measured participants’ EMB and cognitive reappraisal before the intervention as well as at three follow-ups. Eighty-six late adolescents who scored in the bottom 50% on EMB in a previous investigation were randomly assigned to the intervention group (increasing EMB) and the (...)
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