and how these emotion beliefs vary based on depression status (current MDD, remitted MDD, or no history of MDD). Check it out! (2/2)
https://t.co/U5GCK6vTPi
New paper out now in the Journal of Psychiatric Research! Beliefs about emotion’s malleability, uniqueness, and duration predict suicidal ideation and clinical symptoms. We also clarify mechanisms, such as the use of rumination, in these longitudinal relationships (1/2)
Come join us @AmherstCollege ! We are starting a search for a TT developmental psychologist - feel free to reach out with questions and please spread the word!
https://t.co/00wurv0PJ2
Want a scale that can assess a range of both intrapersonal and interpersonal emotion regulation strategies? We have the scale for you! The Emotion Regulation Strategy Scale (ERSS) – now in press at Emotion! @APA_Journals@affectScience https://t.co/RW7nkKEa9J
Excited to see this research being featured in the @nytimes! Led by @isaacahuvia we examined the impact of college students self-labeling as having depression - are they over or underestimating? What are the impacts of self-labeling? @AmherstCollege
https://t.co/4d4a6wiW6A
Exciting new article in @insidehighered by @isaacahuvia about our findings on the implications of college students self-labeling as having depression: https://t.co/yzD2VGk8TU
We found that depression self-labeling was associated with maladaptive coping strategies in college students - now available online in the Journal of Affective Disorders: https://t.co/3KsiIkIXb2
The free preprint can be accessed below ⬇️
📢New preprint! We explored the relationship between depression self-labeling and coping strategies in college students. We found a lot! ⬇️
With @JSchleiderPhD@tepe_e and the wisely un-twittered Jason Moser and Hans Schroder
https://t.co/pafbxxN4Vv
🏑 MAMMOTHS WIN!
NESCAC Quarterfinal
Amherst 3⃣
Tufts 2⃣
• Kat Mason scores her second goal of the game in OT to keep Amherst's season alive!
• Mammoths face defending national champion Middlebury in the NESCAC semifinals next Saturday (Nov. 4) at 11 am
#TusksUp🦣
People with depressive symptoms who were led to believe that their emotions are malleable engaged in more cognitive reappraisal and displayed greater recovery after a negative emotional event. https://t.co/wHJts2bOjQ
In it we find that promoting a more malleable view of emotions among individuals with depressive symptoms leads to the greater use of cognitive reappraisal in the moment and greater emotion recovery when faced with a negative emotion induction.
Excited to see this paper - "Emotion malleability beliefs influence emotion regulation and emotion recovery among individuals with depressive symptoms" co-authored with @LaurenSimpson_1 out now in Cognition and Emotion! @AmherstCollege
https://t.co/YQG7Qxo888