2016
DOI: 10.1007/s10826-016-0368-y
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Associations Between Temperament, Emotion Regulation, and Depression in Youth: The Role of Positive Temperament

Abstract: For a long time, associations between temperamental reactivity, emotion regulation (ER) strategies, and depression in youth were studied with a primary focus on the adverse impact of the negative emotionality (NE) temperament dimension and maladaptive ER strategies. The current study aims to answer the question whether positive emotionality (PE) and adaptive ER strategies also play a role in these associations. In a convenience sample of 176 youth (9-18 years; M = 13.58, SD = .94) data were obtained on NE and … Show more

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citations
Cited by 25 publications
(22 citation statements)
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References 73 publications
(133 reference statements)
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“…Clinical practitioners also should consider EC when training youth to use an adaptive ER strategy (Van Beveren, McIntosh, et al ., ; Van Beveren, Mezulis, Wante, & Braet, ). Given that EC may play a central role in linking reactive temperament to adaptive ER (Fox & Calkins, ; Lonigan & Vasey, ; Verstraeten, Vasey, Raes, & Bijttebier, ), more extensive treatment may be needed for youth low in EC.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Clinical practitioners also should consider EC when training youth to use an adaptive ER strategy (Van Beveren, McIntosh, et al ., ; Van Beveren, Mezulis, Wante, & Braet, ). Given that EC may play a central role in linking reactive temperament to adaptive ER (Fox & Calkins, ; Lonigan & Vasey, ; Verstraeten, Vasey, Raes, & Bijttebier, ), more extensive treatment may be needed for youth low in EC.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Until now, research has largely focused on the role of maladaptive ER strategies as risk factors for youth depression (Mezulis, Priess, & Hyde, ) and the greater presence of maladaptive ER strategies among youth with high NE (Mezulis et al ., ). However, recent studies suggest that a lack of adaptive ER strategies also may confer risk of depression (Braet et al ., ; Schäfer, Naumann, Holmes, Tuschen‐Caffier, & Samson, ) and impair youth's ability to adaptively regulate negative affect, which is uniquely related to temperamental PE (Van Beveren, McIntosh, et al ., ; Van Beveren, Mezulis, Wante, & Braet, ). This study seeks to integrate the largely distinct empirical discussions on temperament and ER by examining the joint contributions of PE and adaptive ER strategies on youth depressive symptoms.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The second iteration of this measure (SNAP‐2) is composed of 15 trait personality dimensions, which include negative temperament, disinhibition, impulsivity, self‐harm, aggression, manipulativeness, exhibitionism, entitlement, dependency, detachment, workaholism, propriety, eccentric perceptions, mistrust and positive temperament. Of these domains, negative temperament, positive temperament, disinhibition, impulsivity, self‐harm, aggression, dependency and mistrust have been linked to emotion regulation . To our knowledge, no studies have explicitly examined the relationships between dimensions central to Cluster A and C personality disorders such as detachment, exhibitionism, entitlement, workaholism, propriety, or eccentric perceptions, and emotion regulation variables.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of these domains, negative temperament, positive temperament, disinhibition, impulsivity, self-harm, aggression, dependency and mistrust have been linked to emotion regulation. [25][26][27][28][29][30][31] To our knowledge, no studies have explicitly examined the relationships between dimensions central to Cluster A and C personality disorders such as detachment, exhibitionism, entitlement, workaholism, propriety, or eccentric perceptions, and emotion regulation variables.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%