Emotion Recognition Ability as a Predictor of Well-Being During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Author:

Schlegel Katja1ORCID,Gugelberg Helene M. von1ORCID,Makowski Lisa M.1,Gubler Danièle A.1,Troche Stefan J.1

Affiliation:

1. University of Bern, Switzerland

Abstract

This study examined emotion recognition ability (ERA) as a predictor of positive and negative affect in two Australian and one German-speaking samples (total N = 469) during the first 2 weeks of major public life restrictions in the COVID-19 pandemic in March/April 2020. Individuals with higher ERA did not report more positive affect, but they felt less burdened and reported less negative affect. This association was fully mediated by lower COVID-19-related media consumption and less negative affect after reading an eyewitness report from an Italian city with a high COVID-19 death toll. However, higher ERA was also related to arguing more with close others. For low-to-medium ERA, an adaptive cognitive emotion regulation style predicted lower media consumption and for medium-to-high ERA, a maladaptive regulation style marginally increased the perceived likelihood of experiencing a similar situation as in Italy, suggesting that regulation style may moderate the ERA–affect relationship.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

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