Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
921339 Biological Psychology 2010 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Frontal EEG activity is thought to reflect affective dispositions, but may also reflect the emotional demands of a specific context combined with the capability to regulate emotions in that context. The present study examined this hypothesis by testing whether frontal EEG activity during mood inductions versus a resting baseline predicted emotion regulation. EEG was recorded while participants (N = 66, 40 females) received a fearful, sad, or neutral mood induction. Emotion regulation was measured following the mood inductions as self-reported change in negative mood and as attention interference in a task with mood-congruent emotional distracters. Greater frontal EEG activity during the mood inductions versus baseline was associated with more effective emotion regulation: less post-induction sadness and anxiety and reduced mood-congruent attention interference effects. Effects did not differ between the left and right hemispheres. Results support the hypothesis that frontal EEG activity reflects both emotional context and emotion-regulatory capabilities.

Research highlights▶ Greater frontal EEG during mood inductions promotes emotion regulation. ▶ Effects did not differ between the left and right hemispheres. ▶ Frontal EEG indexes both emotional context and emotion-regulatory capabilities.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
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