Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
909353 | Journal of Anxiety Disorders | 2014 | 8 Pages |
•Emotion regulation strategies have asymmetric relationships with social anxiety.•Adaptive and maladaptive strategies interact when predicting social anxiety.•These relationships are moderated by CBT treatment phase.•Results underscore the importance of context in emotion regulation in anxiety.
There has been a increasing interest in understanding emotion regulation deficits in social anxiety disorder (SAD; e.g., Hofmann, Sawyer, Fang, & Asnaani, 2012). However, much remains to be understood about the patterns of associations among regulation strategies in the repertoire. Doing so is important in light of the growing recognition that people's ability to flexibly implement strategies is associated with better mental health (e.g., Kashdan et al., 2014). Based on previous work (Aldao & Nolen-Hoeksema, 2012), we examined whether putatively adaptive and maladaptive emotion regulation strategies interacted with each other in the prediction of social anxiety symptoms in a sample of 71 participants undergoing CBT for SAD. We found that strategies interacted with each other and that this interaction was qualified by a three-way interaction with a contextual factor, namely treatment study phase. Consequently, these findings underscore the importance of modeling contextual factors when seeking to understand emotion regulation deficits in SAD.