Comparing positive reappraisal and mindfulness in relation to daily emotions during COVID‐19: An experience sampling study

Author:

He Ting1,Zhang Xuelian23,Li Longfeng4,Hu Huinan1,Liu Shijia5,Lin Xiuyun16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Developmental Psychology, Faculty of Psychology Beijing Normal University Beijing China

2. College of Education for the Future Beijing Normal University at Zhuhai Zhuhai China

3. South China University of Technology Guangzhou China

4. Department of Psychology The Pennsylvania State University University Park Pennsylvania USA

5. Beijing Shiyun Jiahe Technology Co., Ltd Beijing China

6. Beijing Key Laboratory of Applied Experimental Psychology, Faculty of Psychology Beijing Normal University Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractResearch has suggested that daily cognitive reappraisal and mindfulness are differentially associated with emotional experience. Nevertheless, the different relationship between these two emotion regulation strategies and emotional experience remains unexplored amidst the COVID‐19 pandemic, when people were facing unprecedented challenges and disruptions in their everyday lives. The current study aimed to examine the potential unidirectional or bidirectional relations between two strategies and daily emotional experience during the COVID‐19 pandemic and whether the associations between the two strategies and emotional experience varied. A total of 184 college students participated in this study. Daily positive reappraisal, mindful attention and awareness (MAA), positive and negative affect, and COVID‐19‐related stress were assessed utilizing experience sampling method (three times a day for 14 consecutive days). Results suggested that the directionality of the link between the two strategies and daily emotional experience differed. The links between positive reappraisal and positive affect, negative affect, and COVID‐19‐related stress were transactional. However, a unidirectional relation was observed between positive affect and subsequent MAA. The study provided support for the contextual perspective of emotion regulation by demonstrating that the efficacy of regulation strategies is contingent upon the context. The identification of optimal conditions for effective strategies remains a crucial area for future research.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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