Effects of scaffolding emotion language use on emotion differentiation and psychological health: an experience-sampling study.
T H Stanley SeahKarin G CoifmanPublished in: Cognition & emotion (2024)
Emotion differentiation (ED) - complexity in the mental representation and description of one's emotional experiences - is important for mental health. However, less is known whether ED can be enhanced in adults. We investigated if scaffolding emotion language use during affect labelling - initial provision of emotion word prompts (close-ended) followed by free response (open-ended) - impacts ED and psychological health. Utilising a crossover design, 92 college students completed questionnaires assessing psychological health at three time-points and ecological momentary assessment of emotions, affect valence and emotional self-efficacy for 14 days. Participants were randomised to the "scaffolding" group, where they reported emotions using the close-ended (7 days) followed by open-ended (7 days) approach, or the reverse sequence (control group). We extracted two ED indices: traditional intraclass correlation coefficient from close-ended reports and novel specificity index from open-ended reports. Primary analyses examined group differences across weeks while exploratory analyses examined moment-to-moment differences using multilevel modelling. Relative to controls, the scaffolding group demonstrated greater ED during open-ended emotion reporting of negative emotions and associated shifts in negative affect and emotional self-efficacy. There were no significant group differences in psychological symptoms. Results provide preliminary evidence that scaffolding may enhance ED and have implications for psychological intervention.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- autism spectrum disorder
- emergency department
- depressive symptoms
- minimally invasive
- sleep quality
- healthcare
- public health
- borderline personality disorder
- randomized controlled trial
- clinical trial
- health information
- adverse drug
- open label
- mental illness
- magnetic resonance imaging
- health promotion
- social media
- contrast enhanced