Emotion Regulation and Executive Functioning in Late Life.

IF 2.1 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY
Affective science Pub Date : 2025-01-17 eCollection Date: 2025-06-01 DOI:10.1007/s42761-024-00283-9
David B Rompilla, Erik C Nook, Jacquelyn E Stephens, Emily F Hittner, Vijay A Mittal, Claudia M Haase
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Abstract

Emotion regulation has long been suspected to boost executive functioning. Correlational studies have shown links between emotion regulation and executive functioning. However, experimental studies have been rare, especially with older adults for whom declines in executive functioning may become a pressing concern. In this laboratory-based study, we examined whether instructing older adults to use emotion regulation strategies in response to loss-themed film clips could enhance subsequent executive functioning. The sample consisted of 129 healthy older adults (age 64-83) who completed an experiment consisting of six trials in which they first watched a loss-themed film clip (with the instruction to "just watch" or to regulate their emotions using detachment, positive reappraisal, or emotional acceptance) and then completed an executive functioning task (assessing verbal fluency, inhibition, or working memory). Results showed a selective effect of emotion regulation on verbal fluency, but not inhibition or working memory performance. Older adults who were instructed to regulate negative emotions (vs. "just watch") subsequently showed greater verbal fluency. Effects of emotion regulation on executive functions did not differ between detachment, positive reappraisal, and emotional acceptance and remained stable when controlling for age, gender, education, and functional status. This study contributes to our understanding of emotion-cognition interactions, highlights emotion regulation as an avenue for enhancing verbal fluency in older adults, and suggests further probing of links between emotion regulation and other executive functioning processes in late life.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s42761-024-00283-9.

晚年的情绪调节和执行功能。
长期以来,人们一直怀疑情绪调节能促进执行功能。相关研究表明情绪调节和执行功能之间存在联系。然而,实验研究很少,特别是对老年人来说,执行功能的下降可能成为一个紧迫的问题。在这项基于实验室的研究中,我们研究了指导老年人在观看以失落为主题的电影片段时使用情绪调节策略是否能增强随后的执行功能。样本由129名健康的老年人(64-83岁)组成,他们完成了一项由六项试验组成的实验,其中他们首先观看了一段以“失去”为主题的电影片段(指示他们“只是看”,或者用冷静、积极的重新评价或情绪接受来调节他们的情绪),然后完成了执行功能任务(评估语言流畅性、抑制能力或工作记忆)。结果表明,情绪调节对语言流畅性有选择性影响,但对抑制或工作记忆表现没有选择性影响。老年人被指示调节负面情绪(vs。“就等着瞧吧”)随后表现出更强的语言流畅性。情绪调节对执行功能的影响在超然、积极重评价和情绪接受之间没有差异,在控制年龄、性别、教育程度和功能状态时保持稳定。本研究有助于我们对情绪-认知相互作用的理解,强调了情绪调节作为提高老年人语言流畅性的途径,并建议进一步探索情绪调节与晚年其他执行功能过程之间的联系。补充资料:在线版本包含补充资料,下载地址:10.1007/s42761-024-00283-9。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
4.40
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