“…Several review articles on ER in BPD have included some studies of ER strategies, finding that BPD is associated with greater use of maladaptive strategies such as rumination, experiential avoidance, and thought suppression and less frequent use of adaptive strategies such as distraction and cognitive reappraisal (Carpenter & Trull, 2013; Cavicchioli et al, 2015; Chapman et al, 2011; Gratz et al, 2018; Grzegorzewski & Kucharska, 2018; Jazaieri et al, 2013). However, the majority of these were not systematic, comprehensive reviews of the literature on ER strategy use in BPD but rather included a nondescript sampling of ER strategy studies within a broader discussion of ER deficits in BPD (Carpenter & Trull, 2013; Gratz et al, 2018; Grzegorzewski & Kucharska, 2018; Jazaieri et al, 2013) or discussed the theorized role of one particular strategy (i.e., experiential avoidance) in BPD (Chapman et al, 2011). More recently, a meta‐analytic review (conducted in 2016) of 93 studies of ER strategies in relation to BPD symptoms showed that BPD symptoms were associated positively with the use of three maladaptive (i.e., rumination, suppression, and avoidance) and negatively with three adaptive (i.e., cognitive reappraisal, acceptance, and problem‐solving) ER strategies (Daros & Williams, 2019).…”