Abstract
AbstractThe foreign language effect shows that emotional reactivity is reduced when we use a second language instead of our native one to address different situations. The present study aims to test whether the use of cognitive reappraisal could be influenced by the participant’s language (native/foreign). For this purpose, a sample of 60 participants with subclinical phobia to cockroaches was exposed to several phobic and neutral pictures while they used cognitive reappraisal in their native or in a foreign language. Physiological measures (pupil dilation and electrodermal activity) and self-reports of affective valence and arousal were collected. Results show an overall effectiveness of the strategy of reappraisal in both languages. Additionally, the use of a foreign language depicts a decrease in the affective negativity of the threat stimuli in terms of valence. The ratings of arousal also show a general higher arousal as an effect of the use of a foreign language. The present results suggest that using a foreign language could be advantageous to reduce negative emotionality by reappraisal. However, it could be a barrier for reappraising non-unpleasant pictures. Further studies should explore the foreign language effect in psychotherapy to open new ways of approaching different disorders.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference67 articles.
1. Alnaes D , Sneve MH , Espeseth T , Endestad T , van de Pavert SH , Laeng B. Pupil size signals mental effort deployed during multiple object tracking and predicts brain activity in the dorsal attention network and the locus coeruleus. J Vis. 2014; 14(4).
2. Accessibility of early experience through the language of origin: A theoretical integration;Psychoanalytic Psychology,1996
3. Pupil Diameter and Load on Memory
4. Look before you regulate: Differential perceptual strategies underlying expressive suppression and cognitive reappraisal.
5. Beck, A. T. , Emery, G. , & Greenberg, R. L. (2005). Anxiety disorders and phobias: A cognitive perspective. Basic books.